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MOS COMPARISON

1A2X1 vs 1D7X3

Aircraft Loadmaster (USAF) vs Cable and Antenna Operations (USAF)

Intel

The Air Force promised both of these were "cutting-edge careers." At least the base amenities don't disappoint.

If recruiting promises were binding contracts, the 1A2X1 would be doing "fly on C-130s, C-17s" right now and the 1D7X3 would be "be the backbone of Air Force communications." Since they're not, here's what actually happens. 1A2X1: the airdrop missions are every bit as cool as advertised — HALO drops, LAPES, container delivery systems. The other half of this comparison has thoughts: 1D7X3: your 'cutting-edge fiber optic technology' is a fusion splicer you share with three other shops and a cable locator from 2004 that lies to you professionally. Same Commander-in-Chief, different everything else between the oath and the DD-214.

1A2X1Air Force
Aircraft Loadmaster
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$57K
1D7X3Air Force
Cable and Antenna Operations
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$64K
Head to Head
1A2X1
1D7X3
Getting In
ASVAB Line Scores
G 47
E 47
Clearance
Secret
Pay Grade
Enlisted
Enlisted
Enlistment Bonus
Up to $12,000
Training
Training Length
10 wk
10 wk
Pipeline Type
BMT
BMT
Training Location
Altus AFB, OK
Keesler AFB, MS
Day-to-Day
Promotion Speed
Average
Deployment Tempo
Moderate
Career Field
Aircrew
Cyberspace
After You Get Out
Civilian Median Pay
$57K
$64K
Top Civilian Career
Airfield Operations Specialists
Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technologists and Technicians
Credentials Earned
5 certs

After the Uniform

The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.

1A2X1Aircraft Loadmaster
Civilian Median Pay
$57K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Airfield Operations SpecialistsStrong
Job market: Average (4%)
$57K
LogisticiansRelated
Job market: Faster than average (18%)
$79K
Heavy and Tractor-Trailer Truck DriversRelated
Job market: Average (4%)
$50K
1D7X3Cable and Antenna Operations
Civilian Median Pay
$64K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technologists and TechniciansStrong
Job market: Average (2%)
$64K
Network and Computer Systems AdministratorsRelated
Job market: Average (3%)
$95K
Computer User Support SpecialistsRelated
Job market: Average (5%)
$63K
Credentials You Walk Away With
Fiber Optic Installer (FOI)BICSI Installer 1 & 2CompTIA Network+Tower climbing certificationOSHA 10/30-Hour Safety

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.

1A2X1Aircraft Loadmaster
What the Recruiter Says

You'll fly on C-130s, C-17s, and special operations variants managing cargo that ranges from 463L pallets to live paratroopers to foreign dignitaries. Loadmasters are flying every time the aircraft flies, collecting flight pay the whole time, and working on missions that go everywhere from Ramstein to Kandahar. The precision airdrop missions — low-altitude, high-altitude, container delivery — are genuinely one of the most hands-on flying careers in any branch. And the Air Force will make sure your billet has a real bed.

What It's Actually Like

You will load cargo at 2 AM on a flight line that is either freezing or sweltering depending on the season, after working a 12-hour shift, for a flight that departs in three hours. Weight-and-balance math at altitude becomes second nature so quickly you'll be doing it in your sleep. The airdrop missions are every bit as cool as advertised — HALO drops, LAPES, container delivery systems. The travel is real but you see airfields, not countries; you'll know the inside of the Rota terminal better than the town of Rota. Your back will file a formal complaint around year four. The camaraderie on a C-17 loadmaster crew is the real compensation package.

1D7X3Cable and Antenna Operations
What the Recruiter Says

You'll be the backbone of Air Force communications — literally building and maintaining the physical infrastructure that connects every mission system on base. You'll work with cutting-edge fiber optic technology, climb towers, and deploy worldwide to establish communications networks in austere environments. This is a hands-on technical career that translates directly to high-demand civilian telecom and network infrastructure jobs paying $70K+ right out of the gate. You'll earn industry certifications and your fiber splicing skills alone are worth their weight in gold.

What It's Actually Like

You are a cable dog. You will dig trenches in 110-degree heat and run fiber through underground vaults that smell like something crawled in there during the Clinton administration and never crawled out. Your 'cutting-edge fiber optic technology' is a fusion splicer you share with three other shops and a cable locator from 2004 that lies to you professionally. You will climb antenna towers in conditions that would make OSHA weep, and the safety briefing is basically 'don't fall.' Your hands will be permanently torn up from pulling cable through conduit that was installed by someone who clearly hated the next person who'd have to work on it — which is you. The 'deploy worldwide' part is real: you'll set up comms in places that don't have running water yet, and somehow you're expected to get a SIPR connection working before anyone builds a latrine. The civilian telecom industry WILL hire you, though. Fiber splicers are in genuine demand and your clearance is a bonus. Just don't tell them about the time you accidentally cut the base commander's internet during a VTC with a three-star.

The Real Life

Same dimensions, side by side. 1A2X1 on the left, 1D7X3 on the right.

Daily Life
1A2X1

1D7X3

Morning: check trouble tickets, prioritize outages, grab tools and head to the job site. Midday: splice fiber, terminate cables, troubleshoot connectivity, test circuits with an OTDR. Afternoon: documentation (if you're disciplined), more cable pulls, and the inevitable emergency ticket because someone with a backhoe just cut through the main fiber trunk feeding the command post. You'll spend more time underground and on ladders than at a desk. The shop van is your office.

Training / School
1A2X1

1D7X3

Tech school at Keesler AFB (MS) — roughly 4 months. You'll learn copper and fiber optic cable installation, fusion splicing, antenna installation and maintenance, OTDR testing, and outside plant fundamentals. Biloxi is humid enough to swim through the air, but the casinos and Gulf Coast seafood are solid. The hands-on training is genuinely useful — this is one of the few tech schools where what you learn actually matches what you do at your first base.

Physical Demands
1A2X1

1D7X3

Moderate to high. Tower climbing, trench digging, pulling cable through tight spaces, and working outdoors in every weather condition imaginable. You will carry heavy spools of cable and spend entire days in manholes and cable vaults. Grip strength becomes a personality trait.

Where You'll Be Stationed
1A2X1
1D7X3
Keesler AFB (MS)Scott AFB (IL)Ramstein AB (Germany)Kadena AB (Japan)Osan AB (Korea)Tinker AFB (OK)Langley AFB (VA)Hickam AFB (HI)
The Honest Truth
1A2X1

1D7X3

Cable and Antenna is the most blue-collar AFSC in the cyber career field, and its people will tell you that with pride. While everyone else in 1D7 sits at keyboards, you're outside in the elements actually building the physical network they all depend on. The recruiter will call it 'cyber' because everything got rebranded under the 1D7 umbrella, but your daily reality is closer to a telecom lineman than a cybersecurity analyst. That's not a bad thing — it means your skills are tangible, your work is visible, and you'll never sit through a meeting about 'synergizing digital transformation.' The flip side: the work is physically demanding, the hours during outages are brutal, and you will develop a Pavlovian stress response to the sound of heavy equipment operating near buried cable. The civilian translation is excellent. Fiber splicers and cable installers are in serious demand and your security clearance makes you even more attractive to defense contractors. The honest truth is this: you won't be a hacker, you won't be a coder, and your job title will confuse people at parties. But the comms don't work without you. The mission doesn't move without you. And there's something deeply satisfying about being the person who makes the lights blink.

Recent Reviews

1A2X1
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1D7X3
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