EO vs AB
Equipment Operator (USN) vs Aviation Boatswain's Mate (USN)
Two Sailors walk into liberty port. One's been staring at a radar. The other's been wrestling an engine. Both need a beer with equal desperation.
Quality of life comparison: EO offers quality of life: ask again later (the Magic 8-Ball response of career counseling). AB offers quality of life data pending, which somehow feels ominous. 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. Both know what 0500 feels like. They just disagree about what it's for.
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. EO on the left, AB on the right.
Operating bulldozers, motor graders, hydraulic excavators, rubber-tired earthmovers, scrapers, compactors, and loaders on active construction projects — runways, roads, ammunition supply points, and expeditionary facility site preparation. Between deployments: PMS on assigned equipment, battalion field exercises, operator certification maintenance, and SCWS sustainment training. On deployment, you are the one moving earth to build the mission — the timeline for everything downstream (framing, utilities, hardening) starts when your blade finishes.
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A School at the Naval Construction Training Center (NCTC) at Port Hueneme, CA is roughly 9-12 weeks of the EO pipeline covering operator theory, grading and earthmoving techniques, equipment-specific operation, and safety procedures. All Seabees complete SCWS training — the combat-skills certification that distinguishes the Seabee community across the Navy.
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High. Operating heavy equipment all day in desert heat, jungle humidity, or austere conditions demands physical conditioning even when you're in a cab. Ground guides, manual surveying, and the military component of the Seabee mission require full physical fitness. SCWS qualification is mandatory.
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The recruiter will show you pictures of Seabees grading runways in combat zones, and that history is real — Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and still today in the Pacific and Africa. What they may not emphasize is that the modern deployment cycle is more theater-presence than active combat construction, and garrison life between rotations at Gulfport or Port Hueneme has an administrative rhythm that can feel slow if you came in expecting nonstop project work. The honest truth on the other side: heavy equipment operators are in near-constant civilian demand at $65-100K+ depending on region, and Seabee EOs enter that market with documented multi-equipment experience most civilian operators spend five to ten years accumulating. The SCWS military requirement is real and demanding. The physical work environment on deployment is genuinely hard. But if you invest in your USMAP credentials and equipment documentation while you're in, you will exit the Navy into one of the best civilian job markets any military rating produces.
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