nfo2b
Well, not anymore... :(
Okay, as the title suggests, these questions are posed to the more experienced aviators in here--those who have been in the community for more than 1 tour, and have (if this is possible for aviators
) have outgrown the bravado and "all shoes are evil" attitudes of their JO youth. I'd like some mature wisdom here, not just "Go aviation, it's the coolest, and 'shoes' eat their young!" I've heard all that from the younger guys here, and it's not helpful. So here goes:
I've got a buddy here at UofA, a fellow STA-21 OC who's CORE (i.e. not designated or locked in to any community). I'm NFO option. We're both seniors, and he must make his community decision soon. He's just about got it narrowed down to SWO-Nuke or NFO (doesn't have the eyes for pilot). Being a former nuke, he knows what to expect from the former, and having been there, he knows that he would enjoy it. Some of the advantages he lists are:
So he comes to me, an NFO option OC, and asks me what the NFO community has to offer beyond just the coolness of flying in airplanes, and why I chose NFO (answer: just to do something different--had been a Nuke for 8 years). And therein lies the crux of this situation: being a former nuke myself, I know very little about NFO, or the Naval Aviation community in general. I've been a member here now for a couple of years, and in those two years, here's what I've learned about Naval Aviation:
So that's why I directed this question to the more experienced aviators here. I'd like a mature perspective on why "NFO is preferable to SWO-anything." What are some things, that NFO has to offer beyond an exciting time flying planes (which, after all, may not be exciting at all if either him or I get stuck in the back of a dark tube flying ovals or zig-zags for 8 hours straight staring at a radar screen, a la E-2C's or P-3's--owwww!) Can I get a detailed layout of the post-flight school career path, up through O-6? Can you counter his points above with equivalent advantages on the NFO side?
Again, I respectfully ask that noone responds with anything along the lines of "Naval aviation ROCKS, everything else SUCKS!" or "SWO? I heard they eat their young!"
Like I said, I've already heard all of that, and it doesn't faze me.
Thanks in advance for the help.

I've got a buddy here at UofA, a fellow STA-21 OC who's CORE (i.e. not designated or locked in to any community). I'm NFO option. We're both seniors, and he must make his community decision soon. He's just about got it narrowed down to SWO-Nuke or NFO (doesn't have the eyes for pilot). Being a former nuke, he knows what to expect from the former, and having been there, he knows that he would enjoy it. Some of the advantages he lists are:
- Only 20% of sea-going career on a Nuke platform
- Variety of sea-duty (i.e. first sea tour can be ANYTHING, not just CVN)
- Large variety of shore-duty assignments
- Early promotion to O-4 (SWO-N's spot promote to LCDR upon billeting to PA in about 9 yrs)
- Driving ships--whether you care to admit it or not, this IS cool!
- EXTREMELY valuable experience for the outside job market.
- More leadership experience (i.e. SWO-N's spend more time managing divisions and sailors than aviators, who spend much of their "officer" time flying."
- Very little possibility of getting attrited from your training pipeline and dismissed from the Navy (unlike the current aviation pipeline situation--20% attrition? Ouch.)
So he comes to me, an NFO option OC, and asks me what the NFO community has to offer beyond just the coolness of flying in airplanes, and why I chose NFO (answer: just to do something different--had been a Nuke for 8 years). And therein lies the crux of this situation: being a former nuke myself, I know very little about NFO, or the Naval Aviation community in general. I've been a member here now for a couple of years, and in those two years, here's what I've learned about Naval Aviation:
- About 90% of aviators LOVE their jobs
- About 190% of aviators LOVE themselves
- All aviators think that all "shoes" are evil, and that noone in their right mind would even consider doing anything other than Aviator, especially SWO--and may noone ever mention that 4-letter word "n-u-k-e"
So that's why I directed this question to the more experienced aviators here. I'd like a mature perspective on why "NFO is preferable to SWO-anything." What are some things, that NFO has to offer beyond an exciting time flying planes (which, after all, may not be exciting at all if either him or I get stuck in the back of a dark tube flying ovals or zig-zags for 8 hours straight staring at a radar screen, a la E-2C's or P-3's--owwww!) Can I get a detailed layout of the post-flight school career path, up through O-6? Can you counter his points above with equivalent advantages on the NFO side?
Again, I respectfully ask that noone responds with anything along the lines of "Naval aviation ROCKS, everything else SUCKS!" or "SWO? I heard they eat their young!"
Like I said, I've already heard all of that, and it doesn't faze me.
Thanks in advance for the help.