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Should have never gotten rid of the S-3B, thanks Nathman. That subject is its own thread.CNO knows what HSM is and thinks Romeos are valuable.
He does not know about the existence of other helos.
Knowing what I know now: Go HSM CVW. HSM has a far brighter future and more relevant mission. CVW will always be the bright center of NAE and the squadrons are smaller JO wise so there's likely better fitrep breakout potential than in an EXP squadron with a million JOs. I'd also add to strongly consider Japan because youll deploy and fly more. Plus you have the rest of your life to live in America.
Do NOT even consider going HM unless you have little man syndrome and just have to ground turn an old and busted big Helo. Note that I said ground turn vice fly. Actually, if you have little man syndrome I'd still recommend HSM CVW but just go buy an F350 dualie.
I'm sure that is what you saw in Orange and White land, where the career prospects following that tour are bordering between slim and none.
None of this should come as a surprise...
... but the implication I was interested in was that career opportunities for HT/VT instructors are "slim to none"...
In other words, if I put HTs first and got them because I wanted to go back to Pensacola and teach kids, there's a fulfilling job to be had there, but it's not developing my specific community and helping to sharpen its edge against near-peer adversaries. Sounds like the "silver path" to me.
This isn't aimed at you, but we're supposed to be military men and the amount of anxiety people display over something as ultimately inconsequential as the slight difference in promotion rates between different production jobs makes me cringe. Have some balls and do what you want.
Mmmm...that makes me moist.
Promotional rates haven't been much of a guiding concern for me, but it's worth considering if someone with a spreadsheet can show that 90% of people who wind up in the operational 60 took FRS/WTI and only 10% clawed their way back from HT/VT. If my end goal was that I wanted to fly the 60 at sea again (arguably the most career fun I've ever had), then what I do with the next tour matters more. If the numbers are always in flux and I'm not fucking myself by doing something I'd rather do in the short term, then obviously I'll do that thing.
But, above all, this is an online forum with a wide range of experience/wisdom/knowledge, and all knowledge is worth having.