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Hi I'm new and I got a fitness benchmark question
Posted: Mon 23 Jan, 2006 12:58 pm
by Grandor
Hi I'm 17 and live in Australia.
I am looking to join the army at the end of the year as an Infantry Officer.
I've seen people posting their stats on here.
What are the typical benchmark type things u guys use to say how fit u are.
ie - beep test rank, max. pullups, max. chinups, bench press 1RM etc.
thanks guys, and happy training to you all.
Posted: Mon 23 Jan, 2006 1:35 pm
by Geordie
Welcome to MFAT.
Generally I'd say the main things are 1.5 (2.4km) mile best effort time which is the standard Battle Fitness Test, maximum amount of pressups in 2 minutes and the same for situps.
Bench press and weights, while impressive, aren't something that you should concentrate on for the military (at least in my opinion) since emphasis is on lifting your own body weight. You do need explosive strength and power but I'd rather not have to carry around the excess bulk of muscle from being able to benchpress 300kg.
Things may be different in the Australian Army but this here is predominantly a British military forum.
edit: imperial > metric
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 4:35 am
by Grandor
Geordie wrote:Welcome to MFAT.
Generally I'd say the main things are 1.5 (2.4km) mile best effort time which is the standard Battle Fitness Test, maximum amount of pressups in 2 minutes and the same for situps.
Bench press and weights, while impressive, aren't something that you should concentrate on for the military (at least in my opinion) since emphasis is on lifting your own body weight. You do need explosive strength and power but I'd rather not have to carry around the excess bulk of muscle from being able to benchpress 300kg.
Things may be different in the Australian Army but this here is predominantly a British military forum.
edit: imperial > metric
cool
excellent. You live in newcastle.
I also live in newcastle, except the aussie version. lol.
I've been to newcastle-upon-tyne and have relo's there. I liked the place...
Can you explain to me what a pressup is, i think i have a different name for it.
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 7:14 am
by Grandor
Ok, I just did the 1.5 mile run, at a sustained 10.6km/h = 13:40
I'm sure with training this will improve.
I followed this with 8 wide grip pullups (about double shoulder width).
Is this alrite?
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 8:01 am
by cruicent
pushup = pressup (lie on floor, hands shoulderish width apart on floor, push up with arms).
It will improve if you keep at it.
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 9:21 am
by Grandor
cruicent wrote:pushup = pressup (lie on floor, hands shoulderish width apart on floor, push up with arms).
It will improve if you keep at it.
haha press ups. ok.
I'll see what can be done tomorrow...
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 9:43 am
by themattmeister
Grandor wrote:Ok, I just did the 1.5 mile run, at a sustained 10.6km/h = 13:40
I'm sure with training this will improve.
I followed this with 8 wide grip pullups (about double shoulder width).
Is this alrite?
You want to be getting this down to sub 9 minutes.
But the chin ups are good.
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 10:12 am
by Grandor
themattmeister wrote:You want to be getting this down to sub 9 minutes.
But the chin ups are good.
sub what?
lol.
ok, ill work on that one then.
Is sub 9minutes army or SAS standard?
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 11:31 am
by themattmeister
Well the lads who go on their PJFT for the Marines are getting sub 9 or there abouts (if not it's just because the machine will not go any faster).
The Battle fitness assessment consists of a 1.5 mile run as a group completed in 15 mins and then a best effort of 1.5 miles.
The time you have to complete that in would be dependent upon what you're aiming for, Para's is sub 9. If you're aiming for a good level of fitness though you should be aiming to do 1.5 miles straight off at atleast sub 9 minutes, especially as an officer.
Don't fear though this sought of pace is acheivable for anyone with average fitness and a will to succeed.
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 11:53 am
by Grandor
themattmeister wrote:Well the lads who go on their PJFT for the Marines are getting sub 9 or there abouts (if not it's just because the machine will not go any faster).
The Battle fitness assessment consists of a 1.5 mile run as a group completed in 15 mins and then a best effort of 1.5 miles.
The time you have to complete that in would be dependent upon what you're aiming for, Para's is sub 9. If you're aiming for a good level of fitness though you should be aiming to do 1.5 miles straight off at atleast sub 9 minutes, especially as an officer.
Don't fear though this sought of pace is acheivable for anyone with average fitness and a will to succeed.
Then I shall aim for 8.
Happy training boys.
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 4:53 pm
by borisimo
under 10.45 is a pass for the PJFT, the treadmill i used only went up to a maximum of 16kph and i had it set at about 15.5-15.8 for most of the time.
Posted: Tue 24 Jan, 2006 8:15 pm
by dalo
Borisimo wrote:under 10.45 is a pass for the PJFT, the treadmill i used only went up to a maximum of 16kph and i had it set at about 15.5-15.8 for most of the time.
Hey borismo you nervous about your prmc, im sure all will be fine once you and you new friends hit the showers naked style.
Posted: Thu 26 Jan, 2006 1:29 pm
by borisimo
nervous about PRMC yes......ive hurt a muscle in my leg so swimming and running is going to be hard. through the pain barrier i guess. we are all fairly well aquainted in the showers department already

Posted: Thu 26 Jan, 2006 1:31 pm
by dalo
After my naked showers at PRMC i shower naked at swimming now, just doesnt feel right not to

.