Kyle Aaron
Active member
Because he is not training to improve his muscular strength as such, he is training so that he will be able to cruise through the physical aspects of Recruit Course. And you train as you'll work. Nobody will put a barbell on his shoulders during Recruit Course, they'll ask him to drop and give them 50, or climb a rope, etc.
If he can squat 3x 10x 30kg then he should be able to do 20 bodyweight squats in one go. However, beyond about 20 reps of bodyweight stuff it's not strength really but more endurance. On Recruit Course, his endurance will be pushed to the limits far more often than his strength will be. Recruits do 200-600 pushups in a day on average throughout those weeks. He could bench his bodyweight and still have trouble with that, because muscular strength and endurance are different things.
Train as you'll work. I wouldn't join a gym at all to prepare for the military. I'd be out in parks and along roads training. "But what if it rains?" Trust me, PTIs won't cancel runs and pushups because it's raining.
If he can squat 3x 10x 30kg then he should be able to do 20 bodyweight squats in one go. However, beyond about 20 reps of bodyweight stuff it's not strength really but more endurance. On Recruit Course, his endurance will be pushed to the limits far more often than his strength will be. Recruits do 200-600 pushups in a day on average throughout those weeks. He could bench his bodyweight and still have trouble with that, because muscular strength and endurance are different things.
Train as you'll work. I wouldn't join a gym at all to prepare for the military. I'd be out in parks and along roads training. "But what if it rains?" Trust me, PTIs won't cancel runs and pushups because it's raining.