Best bag for taekwondo

nuhash

Yellow Belt
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I am thinking of buying a punch/kick bag but i really do not know what to buy, i want something thats versatile as in i can kick and punch without either hurting my foot or the bag being too soft for punching

i dont want a freestanding bag, they just cost too much! while i am talking about budget, i am willing to spend around £40-50 which is around $65-75

the kind of things i want to practice on the bag are punches (kind of obvious) and kicks but i want to train speed as well as power so if the bag is too hard i will probably break my foot doing a turning kick but if its too soft i cant train punches
 
Have you thought about Craig's List? http://www.craigslist.org/ Apparently a lot of people buy bags and barely use them, so they eventually end up for sale. For the Houston site, a quick search has them starting at $10.
 
craigslist isnt very popular in the UK, had a look on ebay and they seem to go around £20-50
 
Welcome to MT!

I am not sure I understand what you are looking for-are you interested in a hanging bag or a water-base bag like the Century WaveMaster?

In either case, you can use both hand and foot techniques. Just start off slowly until you get used to the impact (and condition your weapons) and gradually increase your power.
 
I'd recommend a Muay Thai bag...great for punching and kicking. Not rock solid like a punching bag, but dense enough to land some really hard kicks without hurting your foot or the bag flying around the room. I have one in my basement and I love it.
 
I bought a used 100# hanging bag for $32 off Facebook Market place, It was 25 miles from me but I picked it up at only gas used cost. Looked brand new. Good luck.
 
I bought a used 100# hanging bag for $32 off Facebook Market place, It was 25 miles from me but I picked it up at only gas used cost. Looked brand new. Good luck.
It's been a minute since I've seen someone use an octothorpe to denote pound
 
It's been a minute since I've seen someone use an octothorpe to denote pound
On the wrong side of the number from what I am used to seeing, but the delimiter/hashtag is still used quite often in manufacturing. #100 is how I would usually see it.
 
Well, I am old and that is what I was taught in my youth. But I didn't know it had a name!
 
On the wrong side of the number from what I am used to seeing, but the delimiter/hashtag is still used quite often in manufacturing. #100 is how I would usually see it.
I'm trying to think back to when I did facilities and maintenance work, but don't remember us using them for pounds. Plenty of times I've seen it come before the number though, to indicate a number.
 
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