5937 vs 5911
Aviation Electronic Warfare Systems Technician (USMC) vs Electronics Maintenance Technician (USMC)
Two Marines in the chow hall: one smells like the field, the other like hydraulic fluid. Both think they have it worse. Both are right.
[Documentary narrator voice] "In the Marines, a career field known as 5937 — Aviation Electronic Warfare Systems Technician — reveals itself: you maintain the systems that do this: radar warning receivers that tell the pilot someone is tracking them, jammers that confuse enemy radar, and chaff/flare dispensers that defeat incoming missiles. Cross the hall, different door: The 5911 — Electronics Maintenance Technician — tells a different story entirely: while they fix aircraft systems, you fix the ground tactical equipment — radios, ground radar, EW systems, and whatever other electronic gear the operating forces use." [Fade to black. Credits list a therapist.] Same flag, same anthem, same inexplicable attachment to a career that doesn't always love them back.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“You'll maintain the electronic warfare systems that protect Marine aircraft from enemy radar and missiles — radar warning receivers, jammers, chaff and flare dispensers, and the integrated defensive suites that keep pilots alive in hostile airspace. EW is one of the most classified and technically demanding specialties in aviation.”
Electronic warfare is the invisible fight — detecting, deceiving, and defeating enemy radar and missile systems before they can target your aircraft. You maintain the systems that do this: radar warning receivers that tell the pilot someone is tracking them, jammers that confuse enemy radar, and chaff/flare dispensers that defeat incoming missiles. The work is technically complex and some of it touches classified systems, which means your troubleshooting often involves classified technical manuals and controlled maintenance procedures. Training at Pensacola covers EW theory and system-specific maintenance. In the fleet, you are a specialized tech in the avionics shop — not every aircraft has EW systems, so your workload depends on the platform and squadron. The community is small. Civilian translation is strong but concentrated in the defense sector — EW engineers and technicians at Northrop Grumman, BAE Systems, L3Harris, and other defense contractors are in constant demand, and TS/SCI clearance holders with hands-on EW maintenance experience are particularly valuable.
“You'll repair and maintain the ground electronic systems the Marine Corps fights with — tactical radios, radar, electronic warfare equipment, and communication systems. Electronics maintenance is one of the most technically demanding fields in the Corps, and the skills transfer directly to civilian electronics, telecommunications, and defense careers.”
You are the ground-side version of the aviation electronics techs. While they fix aircraft systems, you fix the ground tactical equipment — radios, ground radar, EW systems, and whatever other electronic gear the operating forces use. Training at Twentynine Palms covers electronics fundamentals and system-specific maintenance. In the fleet, you are in the comm electronics maintenance shop troubleshooting equipment that the operators broke, wore out, or returned with a vague description of "it stopped working." Your ability to read schematics, use test equipment, and systematically isolate faults is what makes you valuable. Civilian translation is solid — electronics technician roles exist across telecommunications, manufacturing, and defense. A CompTIA A+ or Electronics Technician certification helps bridge the gap to civilian hiring requirements.
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