ActionJ117
New Member
Hello all,
I am a 22 year old college graduate studying for the ASTB in hopes of applying to OCS. I am also in contact with an officer recruiter, and I have had the luck of speaking in-person with several veteran naval aviators about careers in the Navy.
My dilemma is that I find the work of both the pilot and the NFO very interesting. Part of me thinks that learning stick-and-rudder flying would be very appealing, but I also think the tactical and systems-oriented work of an NFO also sounds super compelling. I especially find the work of NFOs in the strike community to be compelling (electronic warfare in growlers, and strike-fighter tactics in hornets.) Mastering strike tactics and rader seems like very interesting work, though I do understand that most NFOs are in the P8 and in the E-2.
I have done some reading on this forum, and can say that at least from my perspective on the outside, NFOs and pilots have very similar career oppurtunities and both do interesting work. Also, I think regardless of what I do, I would enjoy being around the motivated and intelligent people who choose to join naval aviation.
I suppose my one concern is that if I went NFO, I would wish I went pilot and possibly vice-versa. I do not want to be in the pipeline and engaged in some bureaucratic battle to transfer over from one side to the other, so I want to make a clear-eyed decision now. From my reading on this forum it seems like some people become NFOs because something disqualified them medically from being a pilot, and some chose NFO voluntarily. How common is it to pick NFO over pilot? Is this questioned in the fleet? And what reasons are there? I would appreciate any guidance on this decision I could get.
I am a 22 year old college graduate studying for the ASTB in hopes of applying to OCS. I am also in contact with an officer recruiter, and I have had the luck of speaking in-person with several veteran naval aviators about careers in the Navy.
My dilemma is that I find the work of both the pilot and the NFO very interesting. Part of me thinks that learning stick-and-rudder flying would be very appealing, but I also think the tactical and systems-oriented work of an NFO also sounds super compelling. I especially find the work of NFOs in the strike community to be compelling (electronic warfare in growlers, and strike-fighter tactics in hornets.) Mastering strike tactics and rader seems like very interesting work, though I do understand that most NFOs are in the P8 and in the E-2.
I have done some reading on this forum, and can say that at least from my perspective on the outside, NFOs and pilots have very similar career oppurtunities and both do interesting work. Also, I think regardless of what I do, I would enjoy being around the motivated and intelligent people who choose to join naval aviation.
I suppose my one concern is that if I went NFO, I would wish I went pilot and possibly vice-versa. I do not want to be in the pipeline and engaged in some bureaucratic battle to transfer over from one side to the other, so I want to make a clear-eyed decision now. From my reading on this forum it seems like some people become NFOs because something disqualified them medically from being a pilot, and some chose NFO voluntarily. How common is it to pick NFO over pilot? Is this questioned in the fleet? And what reasons are there? I would appreciate any guidance on this decision I could get.
