CM vs AC
Construction Mechanic (USN) vs Air Traffic Controller (USN)
Same Navy, same uniform that changes every 4 years, completely different professional realities behind the identical haircuts.
The regret index — would you sign again? — is the most honest metric in military career research. For CM and AC, we're still collecting enough answers to make it meaningful. What we do have is below. Both of these exist in the same org chart. The org chart is lying about how much they have in common.
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. CM on the left, AC on the right.
Preventive maintenance checks, scheduled services, and unscheduled repairs on wheeled vehicles, trailers, bulldozers, motor graders, generators, and auxiliary power equipment. Between deployments, garrison life at Gulfport or Port Hueneme runs on PMS schedules, battalion field exercises, and SCWS maintenance. On deployment, you are the mechanic keeping the construction mission moving — a downed D9 or a dead generator shuts down the entire project.
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A School at the Naval Construction Training Center (NCTC) at Port Hueneme, CA is roughly 9-12 weeks of the CM pipeline covering vehicle systems, diesel engines, hydraulics, electrical systems, and preventive maintenance procedures. All Seabees also complete Seabee Combat Warfare Specialist (SCWS) training — the military skills certification that makes the Seabee community different from every other Navy rating.
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High. Field maintenance in austere environments — desert heat, high humidity, and rough terrain. You carry full combat gear during exercises and deployments while performing physical repair work on heavy machinery. The SCWS qualification requires demonstrated military skills on par with the Seabee combat mission.
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The recruiter will tell you CM is a great way to get diesel mechanic skills, and the civilian translation really is excellent — construction companies and commercial trucking fleets recruit Seabee CMs because you already know how to work on the heaviest iron they operate, often in worse conditions than anything on a job site. What they won't tell you upfront: you are not just a mechanic. You are a Seabee, and that means your battalion trains and deploys as a combat unit. The SCWS qualification and field exercises are real, the deployment rotations are genuinely demanding, and the garrison pace at Gulfport or Port Hueneme between deployments can feel slow compared to the operational rhythm. The community is uniquely tight-knit — the 'Can Do' culture is not a slogan, it's how the job actually runs. If you invest in your trade certifications through USMAP while you serve, you will exit with qualifications that most civilian mechanics spend years trying to accumulate.
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