Is 91E (Allied Trades Specialist) a Good MOS?
United States Army · Military Occupational Specialty
Quick Facts — 91E (Allied Trades Specialist)
AIT / Training
10 weeks
Training Location
Fort Gregg-Adams, VA
Career Field
Ordnance
Verdict: Not enough data
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Score Breakdown
About 91E Allied Trades Specialist
Performs metal fabrication, welding, machining, and other skilled trades work to manufacture and repair parts for Army equipment. Operates machine shop equipment to produce custom components when supply chain fails.
10 weeks
Fort Gregg-Adams, VA
Ordnance
Recruiter vs. Reality
What the Recruiter Says
You'll be the Army's machinist and welder — fabricating custom parts, operating lathes, mills, and welding systems to repair and manufacture components that the supply chain can't provide. Machinists and welders are in severe shortage across American manufacturing. Journeyman machinists average $55-70K; skilled welders with specialized certifications earn more. AWS welding certifications and NIMS machining credentials are achievable through the Army training and add civilian market value. Manufacturing companies, shipyards, defense contractors, and custom fabrication shops all recruit people with real hands-on machining and welding backgrounds.
What It's Actually Like
You are the machinist and metal worker — the person who makes parts that don't exist, modifies parts that don't fit, welds things that have broken in ways that the supply system has decided are no longer supported, and operates machine tools that allow the Army to fix equipment that parts are no longer available for. Lathe work, milling, welding (MIG, TIG, stick), fabrication — these are traditional skilled trades that take time to develop and that the Army's shop environment provides in quantity. Your shop will have equipment that ranges from well-maintained (because the Army machinist who runs it has standards) to 'we are not sure about the provenance of this Bridgeport but it cuts metal so we use it.' The machinists who truly develop their skills in Army shops are genuinely competitive in civilian manufacturing — precision machining, aerospace fabrication, tool and die, industrial maintenance welding are all fields that hire people with real hands-on experience. Union welders in many markets make very good money. CNC machining adds another layer of civilian marketability. The trades are understaffed because fewer people are entering them. Your Army machine shop time is worth more in that market than most 22-year-olds understand.