15T vs 150A
UH-60 Helicopter Repairer /Aircrew Member (USA) vs Air Traffic and Air Space Management Technician (USA)
Same Army, same hooah, same conviction that the other MOS has it easier. This belief is load-bearing and must never be tested.
The 15T's typical grind: the Black Hawk fleet — A, L, M models depending on your unit — is the backbone of Army aviation, which means your aircraft is always tasked, always scheduled, and always the reason someone is standing at your elbow asking when it will be ready. You will know it the way you know a difficult relative: its quirks, its moods, its particular maintenance signatures, and the specific sound it makes when something is about to become your problem. If you turned left instead of right at MEPS: The 150A's version of "work": 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 airspace management work is genuinely important and the mistakes are visible immediately, because an airspace deconfliction failure is not a paperwork error. Two jobs that theoretically answer to the same Commander-in-Chief but have clearly received different memos.
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 UH-60 Black Hawk — the most widely operated military helicopter in the world. Because Black Hawks are everywhere, you'll never run out of work: Army, Army National Guard, federal agencies, air ambulance operators, and civilian MRO facilities all need 15T experience. The A&P license pathway through FAA military credit is achievable and worth pursuing aggressively. Aviation maintenance technicians at major MRO providers average $65-85K, more with supervisory experience. This is one of the most transferable aviation maintenance specialties in the military.”
You work on the UH-60, which is the helicopter that the Army uses for literally everything and therefore the helicopter that never stops flying and never stops needing maintenance. The Black Hawk fleet — A, L, M models depending on your unit — is the backbone of Army aviation, which means your aircraft is always tasked, always scheduled, and always the reason someone is standing at your elbow asking when it will be ready. You will know this aircraft. You will know it the way you know a difficult relative: its quirks, its moods, its particular maintenance signatures, and the specific sound it makes when something is about to become your problem. Phase maintenance on the Black Hawk is a comprehensive process that touches every system on the aircraft. The T700 engines are workhorses that demand consistent care. The rotor head is a precision assembly that requires precision mechanics. The FAA A&P pathway for Black Hawk maintainers is well-established. Civilian operators — offshore oil, firefighting, law enforcement, air medical — fly S-70 variants and need people who know the airframe. The military utility helicopter community is large enough that the transition network is well-developed.
“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. 15T on the left, 150A on the right.
Phase maintenance, inspections, troubleshooting, and flight line operations on UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters. The UH-60 is the Army's workhorse — you will never run out of maintenance work. Garrison includes scheduled maintenance and training flights. Deployment is high-tempo maintenance keeping birds flying for medevac, assault, and support missions.
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.
AIT at Fort Novosel (AL) is about 15 weeks. Covers UH-60 airframe, powerplant, rotor systems, flight controls, and hydraulics. Training is hands-on with actual aircraft. The UH-60 has multiple variants (M, L, V) and the training covers the fundamentals common to all.
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.
Moderate to high. Same physical demands as other aviation maintenance MOSs — heavy components, all-weather flight line work, and extended hours during high-ops tempo.
Low. Airspace management and ATC is desk and tower work. Standard Army PT requirements.
The UH-60 Black Hawk is the most ubiquitous helicopter in the US military, which means 15Ts are needed everywhere. The recruiter will talk about working on Black Hawks, and that's exactly what you do — day in, day out. The advantage of this MOS is breadth of opportunity: every aviation unit in the Army has Black Hawks, so your assignment options are wide and the community is large. The disadvantage is the same as all aviation maintenance: long hours, unpredictable schedules, and the pressure of knowing that people's lives depend on your work. The civilian translation is excellent with an A&P license — helicopter maintenance, airline maintenance, defense contracting, and corporate aviation all recruit from the 15T community. This is a solid trade MOS with a clear career path.
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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