IT vs AMT
Information Systems Technician (USN) vs Aviation Maintenance Technician (USCG)
One fights wars at sea. The other fights drug cartels, pollution, and drunk boaters — simultaneously and in the same afternoon.
Here are two things that happen simultaneously in the same armed forces. Thing one (IT): shipboard systems include ADNS (Advanced Digital Network System) and SCI networks that require clearance to touch and patience to maintain. Thing two (AMT): air Station assignments — Cape Cod, Clearwater, Kodiak, Sitka — each have distinct operational environments. Both of these fall under the same Defense Department. Both involve the same GI Bill. Everything between those two facts is different. The same government that runs both of these also landed on the moon. Institutional range is real.
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 manage Navy network infrastructure and information systems — routers, switches, servers, and the communication architecture that connects ships and shore installations to each other and to the broader naval network. The shipboard IT environment is hard on equipment and harder on the people maintaining it under operational pressure, which means IT veterans who've managed Navy networks have a problem-solving resilience that enterprise IT employers recognize. Security clearance plus CompTIA Security+ and Network+ plus operational Navy IT experience is a competitive federal IT contractor profile. Government IT organizations and managed services providers recruit Navy IT veterans consistently and the clearance is a meaningful differentiator in the federal market.”
You are the person who resets passwords for people who swear they didn't change anything, aboard a ship where going home after work is not an option because the ship is the home. The Navy's IT infrastructure ranges from modern and well-maintained at major shore installations to 'this router is from when this ship was commissioned and we can't update the firmware because the one critical application only works on the old firmware,' and you will experience both in the same career. NMCI — the Navy Marine Corps Intranet — is the enterprise network you will support ashore, and it is a massive IT infrastructure managed by HP/DXC on contract, which means you will learn to navigate both Navy bureaucracy and contractor bureaucracy simultaneously. Shipboard systems include ADNS (Advanced Digital Network System) and SCI networks that require clearance to touch and patience to maintain. CompTIA Security+ is mandatory. CCNA is common. The Help Desk tickets will range from 'my CAC reader isn't working' (it's upside down) to 'the entire ship's network is down and the XO is asking why.' The six-figure civilian IT job is real. The Security+ is real. So is earning it.
“You'll maintain the helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft that conduct Coast Guard search and rescue, law enforcement, and homeland security missions. Coast Guard aviation maintenance means maintaining aircraft that fly into weather conditions other services avoid. The FAA A&P certification pathway is direct and the aviation MRO career is well-established for military aviation maintenance veterans.”
Coast Guard aviation maintenance means working on HH-60 Jayhawks and HC-130s that fly missions in weather that would ground most general aviation aircraft. The maintenance standards are exacting because the aircraft are going out in conditions that test airworthiness in real time. Air Station assignments — Cape Cod, Clearwater, Kodiak, Sitka — each have distinct operational environments. Kodiak, Alaska's weather is a whole orientation experience. The FAA A&P certification pathway and the aviation MRO career are real. Coast Guard aviation maintenance veterans are competitive in the commercial MRO and airline maintenance markets.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. IT on the left, AMT on the right.
Network administration, server maintenance, SATCOM operations, and help desk support. On a ship: you are the IT department for 300-5,000 people, working in a server room that might be 100°F. Shore duty: more structured, 8-hour days, and the chance to work on larger enterprise networks.
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A School at Corry Station (Pensacola, FL) is about 24 weeks. Covers networking, system administration, SATCOM, and cybersecurity fundamentals. The pace is manageable and Pensacola is a pleasant training location.
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Low. IT work is desk-based. Shipboard life involves navigating ladders and tight spaces, but the job itself is sedentary.
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Navy IT is a solid, reliable path to a civilian tech career. The recruiter will tell you it's like being an IT professional — and it largely is, just on ships and submarines sometimes. What they won't emphasize: sea duty is the deal-breaker for many. You will spend 3-4 years on a ship, and IT on a ship means being on call 24/7 when systems go down. The server room is hot, the equipment can be outdated, and you are responsible for everything from email to satellite communications. Shore duty is much more like a normal IT job. The civilian translation is strong — Security+ and military IT experience get you hired — but you have to supplement with modern certifications because the Navy still runs a lot of legacy systems.
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