5100 vs ET
Civil Engineer Corps Officer (USN) vs Electronics Technician (USCG)
One circumnavigates the globe. The other sees their family at holidays. Both involve boats. One involves significantly more existential dread.
If 5100 had a dating profile, it would mention: you will build in war zones with Seabees — the Navy's construction battalions — who can turn rubble into a functioning airfield in 72 hours and silence into a fistfight in 30 seconds. If ET had one: when comms are working perfectly — which is 99% of the time because you're good at your job — nobody knows you exist. One military. Two MOS codes that swiped right on completely different career experiences. Same uniform. Same oath. Completely different conversations at the VFW.
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.
“As a Civil Engineer Corps Officer, you'll lead construction and infrastructure projects around the world — from building bases in remote locations to disaster recovery operations that save lives. You'll command Seabees, manage multi-million-dollar construction programs, and apply your engineering expertise in environments that civilian engineers never experience. The CEC combines engineering with military leadership in a way no other career can match.”
You are a Civil Engineer Corps Officer, which means you build things for the Navy — bases, piers, runways, barracks, and whatever structure the admiral just decided needs to exist by next fiscal year. You are a licensed professional engineer in uniform, and your portfolio includes projects in every climate zone on Earth, in locations that civilian contractors would charge triple hazard pay to visit. You'll manage MILCON projects that cost hundreds of millions using an acquisition process that costs your sanity. The timeline says 36 months. The funding cycle says maybe. The environmental review says probably not. The end user says they needed it yesterday. You will build in war zones with Seabees — the Navy's construction battalions — who can turn rubble into a functioning airfield in 72 hours and silence into a fistfight in 30 seconds. Your Seabees are the hardest-working, most creative, most stubbornly competent people in the Navy, and managing them is like herding caffeinated, heavily tattooed cats who are really good at welding. Your PE license is real, your project management experience is measured in billions, and civilian construction management firms will fight over 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.”
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.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 5100 on the left, ET on the right.
Civil engineering and construction management — leading Seabee battalions in military construction, managing base infrastructure through NAVFAC, and overseeing facility engineering worldwide. CEC officers alternate between operational Seabee tours (leading construction battalions in the field) and NAVFAC facility management tours (engineering and project management at installations).
Maintaining 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.
CEC officers enter with engineering degrees and attend CEC Basic Qualification Course at Port Hueneme (CA). The training covers military construction, Seabee operations, and NAVFAC facility management. Total initial training: approximately 5 months. A PE (Professional Engineer) license is expected and supported.
A-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.
Moderate. Seabee battalion duty involves field construction in austere environments. NAVFAC facility management is office-based.
Low to moderate. Electronics bench work and shipboard troubleshooting. Some climbing to access antennas and radar systems.
Civil Engineer Corps Officer is one of the best-kept secrets in the Navy for engineers. The recruiter probably won't lead with CEC because it's niche, but here's the truth: you get to practice engineering with a PE license, lead Seabee construction battalions in some of the most interesting construction projects in the world, and manage billions of dollars in military infrastructure — all while earning military pay, benefits, and a pension. What they won't tell you: the bureaucracy of government construction is staggering, NAVFAC can feel more like a government agency than a military command, and the alternation between operational Seabee tours (exciting, field-based) and NAVFAC tours (office-based project management) creates a career with dramatic quality-of-life swings. The civilian career translation is excellent: construction management, facility engineering, government engineering (GS/SES), and private sector engineering leadership positions at $120-180K+ are common for retiring CEC officers. If you're an engineer who wants to build things and lead people, CEC delivers both.
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.
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