94E vs 890A
Radio Equipment Repairer (USA) vs Ammunition Warrant Officer (USA)
Same DFAC, same 0630 formation, same NCO who's been "about to retire" for six years — completely different jobs behind the camo.
One recruiter swore you'd repair the tactical radios and COMSEC encryption devices that keep Army communications secure. The other promised you'd be the Army's ammunition technical expert. Both maintained eye contact throughout. The 94E quickly discovers: nobody knows what you do until the COMSEC equipment breaks and suddenly everyone is very interested in your schedule. Now zoom out and look at the other one: The 890A, meanwhile: you will know more about propellants, fuzes, ammunition compatibility, and storage requirements than virtually anyone in the Army, and that knowledge is non-trivial to acquire. Two career paths that diverge at the terminal leave start date and never reconverge.
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 repair the tactical radios and COMSEC encryption devices that keep Army communications secure. The electronics troubleshooting skills are real and transferable, but the real value is the COMSEC experience: communications security, key management, and crypto device handling are increasingly valued by defense contractors and government agencies. A 94E with a clearance and COMSEC experience has a shorter job search than almost any other electronic repairer MOS. The niche is narrow, but the demand within the niche is consistent.”
You repair radios and communications security equipment, which means you fix the things that encrypt the things that transmit the things that keep people alive. Nobody knows what you do until the COMSEC equipment breaks and suddenly everyone is very interested in your schedule. You'll spend your career with a soldering iron in one hand and a technical manual in the other, troubleshooting circuit boards that cost more than your car and are three times as temperamental. Your shop smells like solder flux and frustration. The civilian electronics repair market is shrinking, but COMSEC and cybersecurity are growing, and your clearance plus technical skills are a combination that defense contractors will pay for. You're a niche MOS doing niche work, and the niche needs you.
“You'll be the Army's ammunition technical expert — the warrant officer who ensures that conventional ammunition is properly stored, maintained, inspected, and accounted for from depot to firing point. Ammunition technical work requires the kind of meticulous safety consciousness and regulatory knowledge that most technical fields only approximate, because the consequences of failure are not rework — they are fatalities. Defense contractor positions supporting Army ammunition programs, depot operations, and range safety management actively recruit 890As. ATK, General Dynamics, and BAE Systems all have persistent demand for ammunition technical expertise with Army operational experience.”
The 890A warrant is the explosives technical expert that the Army's ammunition enterprise runs on — from basic load management to theater ammunition management offices to the most complex demilitarization and disposal operations. You will know more about propellants, fuzes, ammunition compatibility, and storage requirements than virtually anyone in the Army, and that knowledge is non-trivial to acquire. The hazardous materials aspect is real: ammunition work has killed people and the safety requirements are not bureaucratic overcorrection, they are lessons written in blood. The career can take you from ammunition supply points to EOD-adjacent technical support to theater-level ammunition management at the OIC level. The civilian hazardous materials, explosives, and safety management industries value this background significantly. ATF, FBI, and civilian law enforcement have appetite for ammunition technical expertise. The career tends to attract a specific personality — methodical, detail-oriented, not prone to cowboy improvisation — and that culture self-reinforces over time.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 94E on the left, 890A on the right.
Troubleshooting, repairing, and maintaining radio and communications security (COMSEC) equipment. Working with encrypted radios, SINCGARS, Harris systems, and cryptographic devices. You are the specialist who fixes the communications equipment that signal soldiers operate.
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AIT at Fort Eisenhower (GA) is about 28 weeks. Covers electronics theory, radio systems, COMSEC equipment maintenance, and troubleshooting to the component level. The training is technical and requires strong aptitude in electronics and math.
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Low to moderate. Electronic repair is bench and shop work. Some field maintenance in deployed environments, but the core job is technical and sedentary.
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Radio and communications security repairer is a niche but technically rewarding MOS. You are fixing the radios and encryption devices that everyone else just wants to work — nobody cares how they work until they break, and then you are the most important person in the room. The recruiter might lump you in with generic signal work, but 94E is specifically electronic maintenance at the component level — soldering, circuit tracing, and board-level repair. What they won't tell you: the equipment can be old and the technical manuals outdated. You will improvise repairs more often than the training suggests. The civilian translation is strong for electronics technicians — telecommunications, defense contractors, and industrial electronics all hire people with your skills. The 28-week AIT is essentially a free electronics technician education.
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