Skip to content
HonestMOS

Got a wild idea? We build for service members — not the brass, not shareholders. If it's good, it ships.

Suggest a Feature →
USCGET

Electronics Technician

Maintains and repairs advanced electronics including communications, radar, navigation, and computer systems.

No reviews yet
Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

As an Electronics Technician, you'll maintain and repair the most advanced communication, navigation, and surveillance systems in the Coast Guard fleet. You'll gain expertise in radar, satellite communications, and computer networking — skills that command top salaries in the defense electronics and telecommunications industries.

What it's actually like

You fix the electronics that keep the ship talking to the world — radios, radar, satellite comms, navigation systems, electronic chart displays, and whatever classified box the intel folks won't let you open but expect you to fix anyway. If it has a circuit board and lives on a boat, it's your problem, and the boat's salt air corrosion has been methodically destroying your work since before you reported aboard. You will develop an intimate personal relationship with a soldering iron, a multimeter, and the specific brand of frustration that comes from troubleshooting a radar system using a technical manual that references components the manufacturer stopped making in 2003. When comms go down in the middle of a SAR case and the CO can't talk to the helicopter, you are the most important person on the entire ship and everyone is standing behind you breathing. When comms are working perfectly — which is 99% of the time because you're good at your job — nobody knows you exist. You will explain the difference between your job and IT approximately eleven thousand times in your career. They will never, ever remember. 'So you fix computers?' No. You fix the things that keep the ship from being a floating deaf-mute. The civilian telecom and defense electronics markets pay very well for your skillset, and nobody will ask you to fix a radar at 3 AM in 15-foot seas.

First-hand intel neededWrite a Review

MOS Intel

ClearanceSecret
|
PromotionAverage
|
Deploy TempoModerate
Career Intel
Duty StationsCoast Guard Cutters · Electronics Support Detachments · Coast Guard Yard (MD) · Various shore commands
Daily LifeMaintaining and repairing electronic systems — radar, communications, navigation, and computer systems on cutters and at shore facilities. You are the Coast Guard's electronics and IT specialist.
AIT / SchoolA-school at Training Center Petaluma (CA) is about 26 weeks — one of the longest in the Coast Guard. Covers electronic fundamentals, communications systems, radar, and computer networking. Petaluma is in Northern California wine country — excellent quality of life.
Physical DemandsLow to moderate. Electronics bench work and shipboard troubleshooting. Some climbing to access antennas and radar systems.
DeploymentsCutter deployments; shore-side electronics support is garrison
Certifications
ET qualificationsCompTIA A+/Security+ (supplemental)FCC General Radiotelephone Operator LicenseGMDSS operator certification
Pro Tips
  1. 1Your electronics and IT training translates to civilian telecommunications, IT, and electronics repair careers.
  2. 2Pursue CompTIA certifications and FCC licenses while active. The combination of military electronics experience and civilian certs is powerful.
  3. 3Petaluma A-school is one of the best training locations in the military. Enjoy Northern California.
The Honest Truth

Electronics Technician is one of the most technically demanding and well-trained rates in the Coast Guard. The 26-week A-school is long but thorough — you emerge with genuine electronics and IT skills. The honest truth: on a cutter, you are the person who fixes everything electronic, from radar to radios to computers. The work is technically engaging and the troubleshooting skills are valuable. The civilian translation to telecommunications, IT, and electronics is strong. ETs who supplement with civilian certifications (CompTIA, Cisco) have excellent post-military career prospects.

Training Pipeline
1
Basic Training8w
Cape May (NJ)
2
ET "A" School28w
Petaluma (CA)
Electronics — radar, comms, navigation, electronic systems troubleshooting.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job.

Electrical and Electronics Installers and Repairers, Transportation Equipment

Strong match
Salary data coming soon
Reviews

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience.

Write a Review