5953 vs 5911
Air Traffic Control Radar Technician (USMC) vs Electronics Maintenance Technician (USMC)
Two MOS codes that share nothing except a fierce, eternal argument about who's more "Marine." Spoiler: neither will concede.
If 5953 had a dating profile, it would mention: the civilian path is one of the best in the electronics field — the FAA pays radar technicians very well ($80-120K+), and they specifically recruit from the military pipeline. If 5911 had one: 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. One military. Two MOS codes that swiped right on completely different career experiences. Same military, same mission statement, two completely different interpretations of what that mission feels like at 0600.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“You'll maintain the radar systems that air traffic controllers use to see every aircraft in the sky around a Marine air station. Surveillance radar, approach radar, and the displays that controllers watch — all of it runs because of you. The skills transfer directly to the FAA and defense contractors.”
You maintain the ground radar that lets air traffic controllers see aircraft — the surveillance radar that shows traffic in the pattern and the precision approach radar that guides aircraft down final approach. When the radar goes down, ATC goes from radar control to procedural control, which means fewer aircraft, wider spacing, and degraded operations. Your job is to keep that from happening. The training covers radar theory, transmitter maintenance, signal processing, and antenna systems. In the fleet, you are at a Marine air station maintaining the radar site — a mix of indoor transmitter work and outdoor antenna and waveguide maintenance. The civilian path is one of the best in the electronics field — the FAA pays radar technicians very well ($80-120K+), and they specifically recruit from the military pipeline. The FAA hiring process is slow but the destination is worth it. Start the application process a year before you EAS.
“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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