mariomike said:OP was Last Active: 20 May, 2017
Too busy with all the training hopefully! ;D
mariomike said:OP was Last Active: 20 May, 2017
Blamehoffman said:Im wondering what I should do to make things easier for myself down the road.
Heres some personal info and my current reps/fitness levels if it helps at all
- pushups: 40
- situps 30
-pull ups: 10
- 5k time: 28 min
Roger123 said:How many times per week should one expect to run during basic training? Is the physical training the same for both BMQ and BMOQ?
Roger123 said:How many times per week should one expect to run during basic training? Is the physical training the same for both BMQ and BMOQ?
Why not? We encourage it with the fat camp they run and not having a PT test.Jarnhamar said:Get in shape now. Change your dirt, drop weight, goto the gym, start running.
Don't make your plan to shown up to basic training and get in shape there.
Coombs438 said:Any advice ?
PuckChaser said:fat camp they run
BeyondTheNow said:That being said, there are people who get there unable to pass who are in fantastic shape.
BeyondTheNow said:That being said, there are people who get there unable to pass who are in fantastic shape.
I can't agree with that, sorry. I think anyone is reasonable shape can meet the mins of the FORCE eval. I am getting old, I am not able to exercise, I am on TD a lot eating hotel/restaurant food and keeping a weird schedule...I can pass FORCE (silver).
The "minimums" for the FORCE test are EXTREMELY low. I can walk, and not with a sense of purpose, the Intermittent Loaded Shuttles and pass. However, the FORCE *test* isn't actually a test. So, even passing it on doesn't necessarily reflect a given level of fitness, as it is meant to measure a mbr's operational fitness IAW the UOS.
The FORCE Evaluation on its own is not a physical fitness test. It is a measure of operational fitness – a reflection of the CAF minimal physical employment standard related to common defence and security duties known as the Universality of Service principle.
*I was on staff (BMQ Instr) around '06-'07 when the PT test was removed from Reg Force application processes; Warrior Platoon which was also called RFT (Recruit Fitness Training) was solely for 'those who could not pass the EXPRES test'. There were other ST (Suspended Training) or Holding sub-units in the Mega...sounds like it has all been amalgamated into the org you mentioned. It quickly went from a platoon to Coy size org, and most people in it had...a 'higher BMI'.
Jarnhamar said:Agree with your disagreement.
BeyondTheNow said:Did you read the examples I followed that statement with? I guess you’d have to see it. One girl, who stood at 4’10”, MAYbe 4’11”, and weighed 100-105lbs soaking wet couldn’t do the dummy drag when she got there. She could run circles around the guys though, was a hockey goalie, could throw out pushups like no one’s business. Think of the drag ratio at that height and weight. All she needed was some fine-tuning and yes, it was her technique. So, say what you will. Just because you didn’t experience it/witness it first-hand should not exclude you from being able to imagine how easy it would be for a person of that stature to struggle. And like I said, she passed and graduated (with a goddamn rucksack that went down to almost her knees, ffs.) The girl was in good shape. As were the others. And I’ve also witnessed males, who were tall and in great shape blow a portion of the test simply because of technique. It happens.
with the rucksack down around her knees FFS
BeyondTheNow said:Based on? Thanks for your contribution. I can rhyme off any number examples of it happening, both RegF in multiple locations & PRes. I’ve watched perfectly fit people eff it up. Is it the norm? No. Most have zero issues. But it happens. Nerves, trying to go too fast, too slow, whatever. It’s not as much of an anomaly as one might think.
Coombs438 said:Hey !
I just signed up to this because I recently enrolled in the army for combat engineer regular. I go to do my aptitude test on Monday .
My biggest fear is that I will not be physically fit enough. But I read somewhere that I don’t do my physical untill I go to BMQ (being optimistic that I’ll get threw the application process).
Any advice ?
Eye In The Sky said:Here's a more important point about 'what I did/did not witness'; I witnessed recruits there, as an instructor. I've witnessed recruits, TQ3 students, PLQ students...Phase 3 Officer students..over many, many years.
If you can't move a sandbag weight because of technique, in a gym, in PT gear...you won't be able to move someone my size down the tac tube, thru the overwing hatch, and off the wing...maybe into a 10 man liferaft in sea state 6. You won't be able to drag someone who just got hit out of the kill zone/line of effective enemy fire, who is full-up battle rattle and you're tired because you've been up for 3 days. You won't be able to extract a casualty on a pitching, rolling ship that has a fire and they're an oxygen casualty. And you're wearing all the gear they wear on ships.
UOS...it exists. Might it change? Perhaps. But right now, the FORCE test isn't about whether you can drag a sandbag 'person' in a gym, in shorts and sneakers after a determined rest period. It is supposed to predict if you can do the stuff I mentioned in the above para, under stress. If you're struggling with the sneakers in gym test, to pass with the 'mimimum', you aren't going to be able to drag me out of the burning aircraft wreckage, or the armoured vehicle with the ammo load and diesel about to brew up, or get me up the ladder on a ship that is listing because it's sinking.
FORCE isn't a PT test. Have a read. https://www.cfmws.com/en/AboutUs/PSP/DFIT/Fitness/FORCEprogram/Documents/FORCE%20Operation%20Manual%20PDFs/FORCE%20Operation%20Manual%20-%20Chapter%201.pdf
1. The acronym “FORCE” stands for “Fitness for Operational Requirements of Canadian Armed Forces Employment”. The FORCE Program is the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) fitness program.
2. The FORCE Evaluation on its own is not a physical fitness test. It is a measure of operational fitness – a reflection of the CAF minimal physical employment standard related to common defence and security duties known as the Universality of Service principle.
3. Some trades within the CAF require higher levels of fitness or operational readiness, but the minimum standards for the FORCE Evaluation are meant to reflect the baseline CAF physical employment standard that everyone must meet.
4. The FORCE Evaluation is designed to capture the movement patterns, energy systems, and muscle groups recruited in the performance of common military duties. Common duties include tasks that anyone within the CAF could be called upon to perform regardless of environment, age, gender, rank or occupation, and are represented by an evaluation known as the Common Military Task Fitness Evaluation (CMTFE).
5. The CMTFE includes the following tasks:
a. Escape to Cover
b. Vehicle Extrication
c. Picking and Digging
d. Stretcher Carry
e. Sandbag Fortification
f. Pickets and Wire Carry
6. The scientific relationship between the CMTFE and the FORCE Evaluation allows the performance and standards of the six common military tasks of the CMTFE to be reflected by the four tasks of the FORCE Evaluation.
Imagine if it was a combat loaded ruck, or a combat 'go bag'. water, rats, ammo, batteries for radios, the radio, and platoon kit like shovels. Not to mention weapons systems. Ever carry a C6 around for a couple of days?
I remember a recruit in my section on a BMQ in 1998. Same type; short, slight build. She was going infantry. passed the entrance PT test. The end of our FTX, they did a 15ish km forced march with Full Marching Order. She didn't make it 1 km. I carried my ruck on my back, and hers on my front from the better part of the distance from Hersey North/South OP to the hard shelter in DDT1 behind Lindsey Valley. Before we got there, she ended up on the safety veh...carrying only FFO (webbing) and her wpn. She ended up at the BHosp. I brought the rest of my section in from DDT1 thru range control back to H23.
My point? Your 'ruck sack was around her knees' course mate probably wouldn't be able to carry that ruck that far with above the "min required kit" for the old ruckmarch test (BFT). But...we don't carry the BFT kitlist on our backs when we are headed to the 2 way live range. :2c:
BeyondTheNow said:I’m not sure what your point is.
You didn’t state any facts or sources that I’m not aware of.
Being an instructor or not has no bearing on standing there and personally witnessing those participating.
I agree that the FORCE is easy. I said that in my post. But, and it’s obviously a moot point, people who are in good shape fail to meet standard. Disagree? Fine, disagree all you want. But I’ve watched it. Repeatedly. And I fail to understand, with all your experience, how you never saw an individual fail to meet standard for an error as simple as how they were trying to complete the specific item.
We’re debating in a circle though.