AS vs AC
Aviation Support Equipment Technician (USN) vs Air Traffic Controller (USN)
Both got the "join the Navy, see the world" pitch. Both mostly saw the inside of a grey steel corridor. Just different corridors.
A Aviation Support Equipment Technician and a Air Traffic Controller walk into a career counselor's office. Civilian career translation data is still incoming — check back or add your own review. The full breakdown — quality of life, leadership, the stuff recruiters skip — is in the ratings below. Two MOS codes that coexist in the same military the way a submarine and a golf cart both qualify as "vehicles."
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.
“Control the skies. You'll be guiding the most advanced military aircraft in the world, working in a high-tech environment where your decisions matter. The FAA will be begging to hire you the day you get out.”
You will sit in a darkened room staring at a radar scope for hours at a time, talking on four radio frequencies simultaneously while a pilot does something you specifically told him not to do. Your world is NAS Oceana approach control, or a ship's carrier air traffic control center where the CATCC smells like electronics and bad decisions. The FAA pipeline is real — your credentials do transfer — but first you will do mid-watch from midnight to 0600 for years, drink enough coffee to strip paint, and explain to a nugget aviator for the fourteenth time what 'say altitude' means. Certification requires a specific tower/approach background that shore duty assignments may or may not give you, which means your entire post-Navy plan can hinge on whether the detailer likes you. The job is genuinely skilled, genuinely high-stakes, and genuinely thankless until the moment a controlled emergency lands safely and you realize your hands were steady the whole time.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. AS on the left, AC on the right.
Inspecting, troubleshooting, and repairing aviation ground support equipment before the aircraft ever start engines. Your morning begins with the daily GSE inspection log — verifying aircraft start units, electrical power units (EPUs), hydraulic test stands, nitrogen servicing carts, wheel and brake service carts, and fuel servicing equipment are mission-capable. When GSE fails on the flight line between flight events, you are the one who responds, diagnoses the fault, and either clears it or gets the equipment red-X'd before anyone connects it to an aircraft. You do not work on aircraft — that is AM, AE, and AT. You maintain the gear that makes the aircraft maintainable.
—
A School at NATTC NAS Pensacola (FL) runs roughly 6-8 months depending on the specialty track and NEC pipeline. You cover hydraulic theory and systems, electrical power units, aircraft start systems (MD-3 and variants), nitrogen servicing, wheel and brake assemblies, and fuel servicing equipment. Pensacola is a quality training location and the coursework is hands-on; the learning curve is steep for students without a mechanical background going in.
—
Moderate to high. You work in the flight-line and hangar-bay environment — jet blast, high noise, hydraulic and fuel hazards, heavy GSE components, and on a carrier the physical tempo is relentless. On the flight deck during flight ops you wear your float coat, cranial, and eye protection and stay heads-on-a-swivel at all times.
—
The recruiter will tell you AS is aviation — and it is, just not in the way most recruits picture. You are not turning wrenches on the F/A-18. You are maintaining the aircraft start units, hydraulic stands, and electrical power carts that the aircraft maintainers cannot do their job without. That matters enormously, and the career consequences of a GSE failure on the flight line are real: bad GSE grounds aircraft, scrubs missions, and in the worst cases kills people. What the recruiter won't tell you: AS is chronically undermanned at sea commands, which means you will see more carrier deployments than many aviation rates, the flight-line environment is genuinely hazardous in ways that accumulate over a career, and the civilian market for airport GSE mechanics is strong but not glamorous. If you want to work on aircraft, fight for AM or AE. If you want a technically solid, physically demanding career with a clear civilian translation to airport ground operations, AS is legitimate and underrated.
—
Recent Reviews
Community Takes
Be the first to share your take on AS vs AC
Compare Other MOS
Search by code or title, or browse by branch