Posted on Aug 26, 2014
CPT Executive Officer
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Everytime I have taken a PT test, and everyone I had talked to prior to today, have always started the 2 mile run time as soon as the last person crossed the start line.

After consulting one of our AIT PSGs and looking in the regulation, it appears that there is no validity to this. the way the Reg. reads is:

“THE 2-MILE RUN MEASURES YOUR AEROBIC FITNESS AND ENDURANCE OF
THE LEG MUSCLES. YOU MUST COMPLETE THE RUN WITHOUT ANY PHYSICAL
HELP. AT THE START, ALL SOLDIERS WILL LINE UP BEHIND THE STARTING
LINE. ON THE COMMAND ‘GO’, THE CLOCK WILL START. YOU WILL BEGIN
RUNNING AT YOUR OWN PACE."

I believe it the old guidance is baised off of the old 21.20 regulation.

What are your thoughts on this? Why do you think they changed it? Do you agree or disagree?
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Responses: 4
CSM Mike Maynard
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The iteration of the 21.20 that allowed you to start the clock when the last person started was in the 80's.

Not many folks still in that were around when this was actual the standard - I joined in '89 and it has always been that the time started on "Go".
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SGT Emergency Medical Technician (Emt)
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That’s the way I’ve heard it, if that isn’t the reg, then that’s a shame.
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SFC William Swartz Jr
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My first couple of APFTs after I joined in '87 fell under the old "time doesn't start until last runner crosses the start line", but from either late '89 or early '90 it starts upon the command Go..was that way when I was an SGL/SrSGL at PLDC '00-'02 and as a Sr Instructor for ABOLC '11-'13. Doesn't provide an advantage/disadvantage at all, in fact if someone is worried about when the clock starts, they probably have a LOT more to be concerned about than the 1-3 seconds difference.....
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