Is 12V (Concrete and Asphalt Equipment Operator) a Good MOS?
United States Army · Military Occupational Specialty
Quick Facts — 12V (Concrete and Asphalt Equipment Operator)
AIT / Training
8 weeks
Training Location
Fort Leonard Wood, MO
Career Field
Engineer
Verdict: Not enough data
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Score Breakdown
About 12V Concrete and Asphalt Equipment Operator
Operates heavy construction equipment for concrete and asphalt paving operations. Paves roads, constructs airfields, and builds other paved surfaces in support of military construction and engineer projects.
8 weeks
Fort Leonard Wood, MO
Engineer
Recruiter vs. Reality
What the Recruiter Says
You'll operate concrete and asphalt paving equipment — pavers, rollers, finishing machines, and the support equipment that builds roads and airstrips from scratch. The International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) represents the civilian equivalent, and journey-level operating engineers earn $75-95K in most markets. IUOE apprenticeship programs recognize military construction equipment experience. Infrastructure spending and highway construction create consistent demand for paving equipment operators with real field experience. This is a trade the Army will actually put you in the seat for.
What It's Actually Like
You will pave things. You will pave a lot of things. You will pave things in heat that makes asphalt the ambient temperature of the sun, and you will pave things in cold that makes asphalt set before it should, and you will pave things in conditions that make you question the word 'paving' as a career descriptor. The concrete work adds some variety: forms, rebar, pours, the specific anger of a pour that goes wrong because someone's timing was off by ten minutes. Your equipment — pavers, rollers, concrete mixers, batch plants — is large, loud, and maintained with the Army's characteristic enthusiasm for PM schedules that slip. The civilian construction industry needs people who can operate this equipment and understand the materials science behind it. Union operating engineers make excellent money. Infrastructure contractors are perpetually short on people who know what they're doing. The Army trained you to know what you're doing, which puts you ahead of most people applying for those jobs. Your lower back will never fully forgive the vibration exposure, but the 401k will make up for some of it.