AB vs UT
Aviation Boatswain's Mate (USN) vs Utilitiesman (USN)
Both got the "join the Navy, see the world" pitch. Both mostly saw the inside of a grey steel corridor. Just different corridors.
Quality of life comparison: AB offers no QoL data, which means either it's new or everyone is too busy surviving it to review it. UT offers QoL unknown, which is the military equivalent of an unrated restaurant on the highway. One of these makes the holiday block leave request feel worth it. The other makes it feel necessary. Which is which depends on the numbers below. Same oath of enlistment, very different Google search histories about career changes.
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 work on the flight deck of an aircraft carrier — one of the most dangerous and adrenaline-fueled workplaces on earth. ABs launch and recover fighter jets, manage jet fuel operations, and direct aircraft weighing 60,000+ pounds in spaces tighter than a parking lot. It's the closest thing to a controlled disaster the Navy runs every day.”
The flight deck will try to kill you. Jet blast, spinning propellers, arresting cables under tension, and aircraft moving in every direction — all on a pitching deck in the middle of the ocean. The work is physically brutal, the hours are relentless during flight ops, and the safety stakes are absolute. One wrong step and you're a statistic. The ABs who thrive love the intensity and take genuine pride in the fact that nothing flies without them. The civilian airport and aviation fueling industry hires from this background, but nothing on the outside matches carrier flight ops.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. AB on the left, UT on the right.
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At homeport: preventive maintenance on base utility systems, HVAC filter changes and belt inspections, water treatment plant rounds, and shop work fabricating pipe assemblies. Pre-deployment workup: ROWPU setup and operation drills, water distribution system exercises, weapons qualification, and SCWS qualification events. On deployment: setting up expeditionary camp water supply (water bulls, distribution lines, pump stations), running the ROWPU to produce potable water, maintaining sanitation systems, repairing HVAC in barracks and work spaces, and anything involving water, heat, or fuel that breaks at 0200.
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A School at Naval Construction Training Center (NCTC), Port Hueneme, CA. Approximately 9-12 weeks covering plumbing systems, HVAC fundamentals, water treatment, and basic utility construction. SCWS (Seabee Combat Warfare Specialist) qualification is an ongoing requirement throughout your Seabee career — it includes small arms qualification, land navigation, and combat construction skills. Most UTs will also complete ROWPU operator training either at A School or through follow-on unit training.
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High. Trenching, pipe installation, and HVAC unit work in field conditions — hauling heavy pipe sections, working in cramped crawlspaces and machinery rooms, lifting ROWPU components. On deployment this happens in the heat of Bahrain or Djibouti. Add the Seabee Combat Warfare Specialist (SCWS) requirement: you are a rifleman as well as a plumber.
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UT is the rate that makes forward-deployed life livable — without a functioning water supply, potable water, working sanitation, and HVAC, a deployed camp degrades fast. That is genuine operational impact, even if it does not make the highlight reel. The civilian translation is outstanding: licensed plumbers and HVAC technicians are among the best-compensated skilled trades in the US, with wages running $70-120K+ in most major markets and demand that consistently outpaces supply. The honest reality is that the work is physically demanding, you will do it in some genuinely miserable environments, and you carry a rifle on top of the wrenches — the dual combat-construction mission is not a recruiter embellishment. Some UTs end up spending significant time at shore facility maintenance billets rather than with deploying battalions, which changes the experience considerably. Document every hour, earn your EPA 608 and USMAP credit, and you will leave the Navy with credentials that civilian tradespeople pay years to earn.
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