GM vs AC
Gunner's Mate (USCG) vs Air Traffic Controller (USN)
Navy: projects power across oceans. Coast Guard: saves people in those same oceans. Different mission statements, same saltwater.
If a GM could go back to MEPS, they'd want to know: 50 cals, 25mm chain guns, and the occasional 76mm Oto Melara that spend 99. If a AC had the same time machine: 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. Neither was briefed on any of this. Both would've appreciated the heads-up. Two veterans at a job fair, and one has four times more recruiters approaching them. Not the military kind of recruiter this time.
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 be responsible for all weapons systems on Coast Guard cutters — from .50 caliber machine guns to the Mk 75 76mm deck gun — and when a drug submarine surfaces or a hostile vessel won't heave to, you're the person everyone on the bridge is looking at. Coast Guard GMs qualify on more weapons systems than most military members touch in a career, and the federal law enforcement side of the mission means you understand use-of-force in ways civilian range instructors don't.”
You maintain the weapons systems on Coast Guard cutters, which means you are responsible for guns that are used approximately never and must be maintained as if they'll be used in the next thirty seconds. You will clean, maintain, inspect, and lovingly care for .50 cals, 25mm chain guns, and the occasional 76mm Oto Melara that spend 99.7% of their operational life pointed at empty ocean. You will maintain these weapons with a devotion that borders on romantic and a maintenance schedule that borders on obsessive. When a drug-running go-fast boat doesn't stop after the warning shots, or a semi-submersible surfaces and the CO says 'weapons free,' you suddenly become the most relevant person on the entire ship for about four minutes. Those four minutes justify the other 525,596 minutes per year of cleaning, lubricating, and bore-sighting weapons that the Coast Guard officially considers a 'secondary mission' but trains you for like it's the primary one. You will run live-fire exercises that are simultaneously the best day of the patrol and a bureaucratic nightmare of ammunition accountability. You will have extremely strong opinions about bore cleanliness that no one at parties, or anywhere else on Earth, wants to hear. Your firearms expertise, armory management, and use-of-force qualifications translate directly to federal law enforcement, private security management, and firearms instructor roles.
“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. GM on the left, AC on the right.
Maintaining and operating weapons systems on cutters, managing armories, conducting small arms training, and supporting law enforcement operations. On larger cutters, you maintain the main gun (Mk 75 or Bofors) and small arms. With TACLET, you conduct drug interdiction boardings.
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A-school at Training Center Yorktown (VA) is about 13 weeks covering weapons maintenance, ordnance handling, and small arms marksmanship.
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High. Weapons handling, ordnance storage, and small arms training. Physical fitness standards are above average.
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Gunner's Mate is a small rate in the Coast Guard with a specialized mission — you maintain weapons and support law enforcement operations. The honest truth: the rate is small enough that billets are limited and promotion can be slow. On a cutter, you maintain the gun and manage the armory. With TACLET, you participate in drug interdiction operations that are genuinely dangerous and operationally significant. The civilian translation leans toward law enforcement, federal agencies, and the firearms industry. Not a large career field, but a respected and specialized one.
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