• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

Marine Corps Career

kacraven

New Member
Alright - I think I saw somewhere that there's around a 90%+ chance of getting one of your top 5? Does that sound about right?
 

teabag53

Registered User
pilot
Dude, don't worry about the deployment cycle as nobody's guess means jack shit. The best you can do do is plan for the worst case and be pleasantly surprised if it's better.

So far as the eye-gouging is concerned you really don't have much of a choice, per se. You would then fill out a 'dream sheet' that gets placed in the TBS raffle and get what you get based on the needs of the Corps. Your performance at TBS has some impact on what you would get but quality spread can still bite you in the ass (ie. supply officer in Barstow, CA or something of the like).
 

taz954

Registered User
FAC Tour w/ Reserve unit

I was looking at the Marine Corps' Manpower website and came across a statement by one of the aviation monitors. He said that getting a FAC tour with a reserve unit would be a sweet deal. Why is that?
 

jfulginiti

Active Member
pilot
None
I was looking at the Marine Corps' Manpower website and came across a statement by one of the aviation monitors. He said that getting a FAC tour with a reserve unit would be a sweet deal. Why is that?

Because you probably won't deploy but you'll still get credit for doing a FAC tour. But I've never heard of anyone on active duty getting a FAC tour with a reserve unit.
 

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
Because you probably won't deploy but you'll still get credit for doing a FAC tour. But I've never heard of anyone on active duty getting a FAC tour with a reserve unit.
It USED to be non-deploying...

And I know at least two AD guys who went to a Reserve battalion for a FAC tour.
 

phrogdriver

More humble than you would understand
pilot
Super Moderator
One, don't let anyone tell you that you HAVE to be a FAC, or even that most do. If you don't want to and you're in the half of your peer group that is regarded as not sucking, you probably won't be forced into a FAC job (not to malign anyone who rocks and got drafted--I'm just speaking to my experience in my squadron). That said, I chose not to do it, and I kind of regret it, mostly because I think I've missed out on learning more of the big-picture "MAGTFery" stuff I used to mock in my younger days. As long as people are talking about good FAC deals, I've known 3 guys who FACed in 2nd Tank Bn and said it was the best thing since pop-top beer cans.

That said, being what is called a "team player" by some, or as "taking it in the shorts" by others, is a good way to get what you want later. Often by filling a job the monitor has a hard time filling, you'll get a better deal on the backside. A lot of guys took an unwanted FAC job and got the orders to be an IP they wanted on the other side. Others do the FAC thing and want to go right back to a fleet squadron. There is not schedule set in stone, but there are what are called "left and right lateral limits" that you figure out as you go. For example, going from your first fleet tour to a FAC tour to FRS instructor is firmly in the straight and narrow. Going from the fleet to be a SAR pilot to the fleet is touching the left boundary and coming back again. Going from the fleet to grad school is going completely outside the lines and you'd better get back inside if you want to stay for a career.

Take it for what you will though. I've been on flight orders for nearly 14 years and have a letter in my OMPF from the Deputy Commandant for Aviation stating that no one should judge me for deviating from a normal career path, but that's another story.
 

Cron

Yankee Uniform Tango
Do you have any say as far what kind of unit you'll be attached to as a FAC (e.g. infantry, LAVs, AAVs, etc.)?
 

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
Do you have any say as far what kind of unit you'll be attached to as a FAC (e.g. infantry, LAVs, AAVs, etc.)?
I hate to say it, but needs of the Marine Corps. What will happen is that sometime between your first and second deployment the MAG will tell the Squadron that they need to cough up X bodies for X FAC tours. The Monitor may have one or two that are more lucrative, but most of the ones I've seen were from group.

For example - our XO came to us and said "I have two deploying FAC tours available, 2/6 and 3/8. They're going to Iraq. Who wants 'em??"

Oh, and what phrogdriver speaks is true with one caveat. If you get a CO that "thinks outside the box" and decides that HAC to FAC is the wrong answer, and that he wants to send only his finest to a Battalion... You could be a player in the squadron and still get drafted for a FAC tour.
 

eurotrash

USMC SNA
As long as we are on the subject of "lateral limits" of your career, I was wondering if down the line after a squadron tour one was to take a PEP tour billet. You are logging hours (possibly even combat hours), just without a FITREP for 3 years, and with a different country. Anyone do this and care to share? Is it a career stopper? Appreciate it...
 

phrogdriver

More humble than you would understand
pilot
Super Moderator
The exchange tours all have WTI as a prerequisite and are pretty hard to get. The prestige kinda cancels out the lack of competitive fitreps. Not a negative, to be sure, but probably have to be followed by a solid fleet department head tour.
 

vick

Esoteric single-engine jet specialist
pilot
None
The exchange tours open to Harrier drivers include the Spanish and Italian Navies (both AV-8) , RAF (AV-8) and USAF F-16. WTI wasn't a hard pre-req for any of them, though if you were trying to get one and competing against a WTI for it you'd be at a disadvantage. When my peers applied the minimums were somewhat negotiable but generally hovered around LATI and either NSI or ACTI (which basically means you have done at least one and maybe two fleet tours). Long term impact varied but could negatively affect your career progression - the tricky part would be satisfying the out-of-cockpit tour that would almost surely constitute your payback for the good deal and still making it back to a squadron to knock out a dept head tour.
 

jarhead

UAL CA; retired hinge
pilot
USMC PEP Info...

S/F

As long as we are on the subject of "lateral limits" of your career, I was wondering if down the line after a squadron tour one was to take a PEP tour billet. You are logging hours (possibly even combat hours), just without a FITREP for 3 years, and with a different country. Anyone do this and care to share? Is it a career stopper? Appreciate it...
 

eurotrash

USMC SNA
Awesome, thanks for the PEP gouge gentlemen, I'll keep in my nomex hippocket until after my first squadron tour...should everything continue to pan out nicely on the training side that is. Saw the AV-8 job in Italy on the link posted, doesn't sound like a bad gig at all. Might be worth dancing around the "lateral limits" on the backside.
 
Top