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Royal marines drop out rate?

Posted: Tue 10 May, 2005 9:19 pm
by wato212
Just out of curiosity, I was wondering what the average drop out rate was in royal marines training. I.E how many people normally pass the 32 weeks.

Posted: Tue 10 May, 2005 9:26 pm
by Jesse
Only 1/4 passes out on time. Most quit but many get injured as well.

Jesse

Posted: Tue 10 May, 2005 10:21 pm
by slaphead_17
What sort of people end up quitting and why?

Posted: Tue 10 May, 2005 10:31 pm
by dalo
There is lots of reasons, its not always that they find it too hard. They might just find that RM life isnt what they thought it would be and decide to quit.

Posted: Tue 10 May, 2005 11:23 pm
by wato212
So on average 75% fail the course? That seems a very low pass out rate, I read somewhere that it was 50% pass the training course.

Posted: Wed 11 May, 2005 12:06 am
by Winnie
put it this way 0.01% of the country can get in the Royal Marines, 0.005% can pass out... pretty low percentage pass out with the original troop...

And when i was there i think they said the rate was 40% pass 60% drop out... pretty bad.. :lol:

Posted: Wed 11 May, 2005 8:08 am
by wato212
Thanks for all the replies, is it just me or does the low pass out rate make it all that more appealing. What I mean is the low pass out rate should frighten me, but it doesn't it just makes me want to be part of the royal marines even more.

Wato

Posted: Wed 11 May, 2005 8:35 am
by Jascar
RM.Nod05 wrote:put it this way 0.01% of the country can get in the Royal Marines
And the commonwealth, too.

Posted: Wed 11 May, 2005 1:58 pm
by speed freek
Jesse wrote:Only 1/4 passes out on time. Most quit but many get injured as well.

Jesse
Jesse said only 1/4 pass out ON TIME, another 1/4 probably go into hunter and pass out at a later date which means overall its probably around 50% maybe a little higher or lower i guess it changes with each troop.

Posted: Thu 12 May, 2005 5:02 pm
by cliffchallanger
sure the royal marines say 99.9% need not apply thats kind of a clue on how hard it will be, i cant wait to have a shot at it. with the proper preperation for it im bound to get close to the end :D

Posted: Thu 12 May, 2005 6:17 pm
by friendlyfireaintfriendly
Im surprised how high the dropout rate is actually. I would have thought that once past the selection drop out is reasonably low, i mean you go to all the trouble of PRMC/POC and any other stuff all that work and years of training and then you just....give up? i mean some people will definitey think "this isnt what i want from life" but i just dont get how you could do that to yourself (or how you would feel afterwards)

Posted: Thu 12 May, 2005 6:20 pm
by Doc
aahhh the voice of experience

plank

Posted: Thu 12 May, 2005 11:51 pm
by GGHT
Another thing i've noticed is the amount of recruits who seem eager to come out after the minimum 3 years, know of or heard of at least half a dozen in my area. There's an uplifting thought for ya!

Seems small percentage for passing out though.

Posted: Sat 14 May, 2005 12:25 pm
by druadan
50% is quite high for such a long period of training. At the end of the day selection is only a few days, when you're living and breathing the Corps for 8 months straight it's a slightly different story. Lads leave because they find it too hard (or they aren't hard enough to cope with it), personal problems (strain on relationships or whatever), injury leading to MD, and so on. Most troops pass out with around half the number of nods they started with, normally about 2/3 of that half are originals. 883 was the biggest troop to pass out for a while, with 25 out of 52 originals and I think 8 back troopers.

And 0.005% of the 200 million living in Britain is 10,000 - twice the size of the Corps. So maybe there is an element of truth in the saying.

Posted: Sat 14 May, 2005 4:22 pm
by Ghost
druadan wrote:And 0.005% of the 200 million living in Britain is 10,000 - twice the size of the Corps. So maybe there is an element of truth in the saying.
Umm... last tiem I checked there's about 60 million people living in the UK. There's only 250 million in the US.

Zak :)