15H vs 150A
Aircraft Pneudraulics Repairer (USA) vs Air Traffic and Air Space Management Technician (USA)
Two Army MOS codes that both got the "Army Strong" pitch and received very different interpretations of what that means every morning.
[Ken Burns pan across a DD Form 4] The 15H, in their own words: leak detection, actuator replacement, line repairs, system bleeding — these tasks become muscle memory. [Slow zoom on a different DD Form 4] The 150A, equally unscripted: the FAA civilian career pathway is solid, but it requires deliberate transition planning — the age restrictions, the hiring processes, and the certification requirements all have timelines that you need to manage proactively. [Somber fiddle music. The narrator says nothing. Nothing more needs to be said.] Two people can serve in the same military, at the same time, on the same installation, and live in completely parallel dimensions.
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 maintain the hydraulic and pneumatic systems that power Army helicopter flight controls, landing gear, and rotor brakes — systems where a failure in flight has catastrophic consequences and where precision maintenance is non-negotiable. Aircraft hydraulics specialists are in demand at every MRO facility in the country. The troubleshooting depth you develop — leak diagnosis, actuator repair, accumulator service on high-pressure aircraft systems — is directly applicable to commercial aviation, where the work is the same but the platforms are bigger. A&P license is achievable and multiplies your market value significantly.”
Pneudraulics is the Army's word for the systems that move things on a helicopter using hydraulic pressure and pneumatics — flight controls, landing gear actuation, rotor brake, utility systems. When these systems work, they are invisible. When they don't work, a pilot tells you something felt 'unusual' on the controls, which is pilot for 'we need to talk about your aircraft right now.' Hydraulic fluid is omnipresent in your life: your uniform, your skin, the specific smell that means you've been around long enough to have a work identity. Leak detection, actuator replacement, line repairs, system bleeding — these tasks become muscle memory. The technical depth is real. A pneudraulics specialist who truly understands fluid power systems and can troubleshoot under pressure is a specific kind of valuable in aviation maintenance. FAA A&P pathways credit this work. Civilian helicopter operators, MRO facilities, and industrial hydraulics companies all hire people with this background. The specialty is specific enough that the resume stands out among the general pool of A&P applicants.
“You'll be the Army's senior airspace management expert — the warrant officer who coordinates Army aviation into the national airspace system, deconflicts tactical and civilian traffic, and ensures that nothing the Army flies causes an incident it cannot explain to the FAA. The transition to civilian ATC management is well-established: NATCA, FAA facility management, and defense aviation contractors know what a 150A brings and hire accordingly. FAA tower management and TRACON supervisory positions are realistic terminal outcomes, and they pay well.”
You'll spend significant time coordinating with entities — FAA facilities, joint airspace managers, civilian pilots, local authorities — who don't share the Army's sense of urgency and who have their own bureaucratic requirements that must be satisfied regardless of what the tactical situation demands. The airspace management work is genuinely important and the mistakes are visible immediately, because an airspace deconfliction failure is not a paperwork error. The FAA civilian career pathway is solid, but it requires deliberate transition planning — the age restrictions, the hiring processes, and the certification requirements all have timelines that you need to manage proactively.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 15H on the left, 150A on the right.
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Managing Army airspace and air traffic services — tactical and fixed ATC operations, airspace coordination, and flight following. You are the Army's senior technical expert on airspace management, ensuring that aircraft are safely separated and that the Army's airspace needs are integrated into joint operations.
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WOCS at Fort Novosel (AL) followed by the ATC and Airspace Management Technician Course. The training covers advanced ATC operations, airspace planning, and tactical airspace management. Entry requires prior enlisted ATC experience (15Q) and FAA-recognized ATC credentials.
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Low. Airspace management and ATC is desk and tower work. Standard Army PT requirements.
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Air traffic and airspace management technician is the warrant officer path for senior Army air traffic controllers. You manage the ATC enterprise and advise commanders on airspace — a role that carries real responsibility because mistakes in airspace management have catastrophic consequences. What the warrant officer advisor won't mention: this is one of the most directly translatable warrant officer positions to a lucrative civilian career. FAA ATC management, airport operations, and aviation consulting all pay extremely well and your military experience is directly relevant. The Army will never pay you what the FAA will, which is why retention in this field is a constant challenge. If you love ATC and airspace management, this warrant officer path lets you stay technical and eventually transitions to a civilian career that pays exceptionally well.
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