0842 vs 0814
Field Artillery Radar Operator (USMC) vs High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) Operator (USMC)
Same haircut, same intensity, same institutional pride — completely different answers when a civilian asks "so what do you actually do?"
Two ETS dates. Two out-processing briefs. Two very different answers to "what are you going to do now?" The 0842 spent their enlistment doing this: the concept is legitimately satisfying — detect an incoming round, compute where it came from, radio that grid to the gun line, and watch counter-battery fires solve the problem. The 0814 spent theirs doing this: the system is genuinely impressive — shoot and scoot capability means you fire a volley and displace before counter-battery can find you. One of these resumes writes itself. The other requires explanation, a whiteboard, and possibly interpretive dance. The career counselor who presented both of these with equal enthusiasm deserves a performance award.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“You'll operate the AN/TPQ-46 Firefinder radar — the system that watches incoming rounds arc through the sky and works backwards to find the gun that fired them. Counter-battery radar is one of the most technically demanding jobs in Marine artillery, and the data you generate drives fire missions that silence enemy indirect fire. Marines who master this have a skill that doesn't exist anywhere else in the world.”
You will become best friends with a radar van that is temperamental in good weather and genuinely hostile in the field. The concept is legitimately satisfying — detect an incoming round, compute where it came from, radio that grid to the gun line, and watch counter-battery fires solve the problem. In practice, you spend a significant portion of your career doing system checks, calibrations, and maintenance on equipment that requires constant attention. You'll live with the artillery battery, which means you share their schedule: gun missions at 0200, field operations in mud, the full artillery experience without getting to pull a lanyard. The technical troubleshooting skills are real and transfer to radar maintenance and electronic systems careers on the outside, but it takes some deliberate resume translation to make that clear to civilian employers.
“HIMARS is the most in-demand weapons system in the Marine Corps right now. You'll operate rocket artillery that can strike targets 300+ kilometers away with GPS precision. Ukraine proved HIMARS changes battlefields. The Marine Corps is investing heavily — this MOS has a future.”
The Marine Corps went from 21 cannon batteries to 5 and poured resources into HIMARS. You are the future of Marine artillery. Training is at Fort Sill alongside Army HIMARS crews. The system is genuinely impressive — shoot and scoot capability means you fire a volley and displace before counter-battery can find you. The downside: HIMARS batteries are small, high-value units that will be priority targets. You will train like you're being hunted because you will be.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 0842 on the left, 0814 on the right.
Operating and maintaining counter-battery radar systems (AN/TPQ-36 and AN/TPQ-37), tracking incoming fire, computing enemy firing positions, and providing target data to fire direction centers. The work is technical and requires attention to detail. Garrison time includes equipment maintenance, calibration, and training exercises.
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The Field Artillery Radar Operator Course at Fort Sill (OK) covers radar theory, operation, and maintenance. About 12 weeks and heavily technical — electronics, signal processing, and fire support coordination. Fort Sill is isolated but the training is solid. You'll be with Army students in the same pipeline.
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Moderate to high. Operating radar systems involves physical setup and breakdown in field conditions, plus standard Marine Corps physical requirements. The equipment is heavy and must be emplaced and displaced rapidly.
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The 0842 is one of the more technical MOSs in the artillery field and most recruiters couldn't explain it if they tried. You operate radar systems that detect incoming fire and calculate where it came from — essentially telling the cannoneers where to shoot back. The work is genuinely interesting if you like electronics and applied math. The downside: it's a small community with limited billets, which means promotion can be unpredictable. The civilian translation is actually decent — radar operators, electronics technicians, and systems operators are in demand in defense, aviation, and weather services. Just don't expect anyone outside the military to know what a counter-battery radar is.
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