FormerRecruitingGuru
Making Recruiting Great Again
Is there a reason all 4 of you on the spreadsheet are only going for NFO? Did I miss a memo?
Because they’re either too old or don’t meet the physical requirments for Pilot.
Is there a reason all 4 of you on the spreadsheet are only going for NFO? Did I miss a memo?
but muh eyesightBecause they’re either too old or don’t meet the physical requirments for Pilot.
Is there a reason all 4 of you on the spreadsheet are only going for NFO? Did I miss a memo?
Was MEPS really that bad for you? I had a pretty smooth experience.For me, that depth perception test at MEPS was impossible, but I was also on 30 min of sleep + super dehydrated. Easily pass at civilian eye doctor, but MEPS is not giving out waivers for depth perception that easily anymore. If you get approved by a civilian doctor, then you have to go back to MEPS and try again. I'd rather stick a needle under my toe and kick a wall than go to MEPS again, so NFO it is. I have perfect vision otherwise. It's unfortunate, but NFO seems like an awesome career, and I have no regrets. I'm just glad to be in a position where I have the opportunity for a career in Naval aviation.
I don't know about the other guys but I'm more interested in the work NFOs do than actual flying your entire career.Is there a reason all 4 of you on the spreadsheet are only going for NFO? Did I miss a memo?
I knew my eyes were bad from the beginning so I never really thought about Pilot enough to ever compare the two. If I were offered both I'd probably take a whack at Pilot, but it's not like the NFO platforms aren't amazing. Lots of cool stuff to do.I don't know about the other guys but I'm more interested in the work NFOs do than actual flying your entire career.
Just my 2 cents!
For me, that depth perception test at MEPS was impossible, but I was also on 30 min of sleep + super dehydrated. Easily pass at civilian eye doctor, but MEPS is not giving out waivers for depth perception that easily anymore. If you get approved by a civilian doctor, then you have to go back to MEPS and try again. I'd rather stick a needle under my toe and kick a wall than go to MEPS again, so NFO it is. I have perfect vision otherwise. It's unfortunate, but NFO seems like an awesome career, and I have no regrets. I'm just glad to be in a position where I have the opportunity for a career in Naval aviation.
Thanks for putting this up. Added my stuff as well, fingers crossed for us allMight as well drop this here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1WSDiw0DPjPaNYhU6I77OGE-2AHOxVcgzeIMmtaE3yNY/edit?usp=sharing
You will need to make "Considerable" improvements in order to apply so soon. Usually the rule of thumb is 6 months. Also, I would anticipate your OR holding your application until the FY19 aviation board which should take place around October-Nov timeframe.
Judging how FY18 boards were 2-3 months apart, I'd assume around early Nov.My medical clearance letter still hasn’t finished which might push me to the next board. Would you happen to know when the board schedule for FY2019 comes out?
My medical clearance letter still hasn’t finished which might push me to the next board. Would you happen to know when the board schedule for FY2019 comes out?
The new FY schedule usually appears around June-July.
For me, that depth perception test at MEPS was impossible, but I was also on 30 min of sleep + super dehydrated. Easily pass at civilian eye doctor, but MEPS is not giving out waivers for depth perception that easily anymore. If you get approved by a civilian doctor, then you have to go back to MEPS and try again. I'd rather stick a needle under my toe and kick a wall than go to MEPS again, so NFO it is. I have perfect vision otherwise. It's unfortunate, but NFO seems like an awesome career, and I have no regrets. I'm just glad to be in a position where I have the opportunity for a career in Naval aviation.