I'm not sure which platform I want. For the reasons I talked about in my last post, I would like to get on the tail-end of the Tomcats before they go away, but they keep waivering on the date they're going to stop taking new RIO's and pilots. I would then like to get into the Super Hornets, but like you said, I'll like what ever I get. Not a whole lot of SNA's and SNFO's go to Pensacola with dreams of flying E-2's, but the ones that get them love it. Though I'm leaning toward the strike/fighters, P-3's have a lot to offer as well. For starters, their NFO's are winged faster. About a year(API and Primary in Pcola and NAV training at Randolf AFB in San Antonio, TX.) Then after the Orion RAG in Jacksonville, you'll go to places like Maine (which I hear is the best kept secret in the navy, it's so nice up there), or Whidbey Island or Jax or Pearl Harbor. That's for P-3's. EP-3's (think plane down in China) will either go to Rota, Spain or to Whidbey Island, WA. Both have different missions. P-3's were submarine hunters. That's abou 50% of their mission now. They do a lot of counter-drug stuff in the Caribbean, and now with some new very sweet radars, they do tactical reconnaisance. I believe it was the Washington Times that reported that we were using them over in Afghanistan as such. Now they're starting to flow into the role of the EP-3, which is always on reconnaisance. We only have two squadrons of these things in the world, so their deployment cycles are on more than they are off and aren't the typical 6 months on 12 off. EP-3's are incredibly sophisticated recon planes, with a pretty impressive characteristic: every time they go up they are operational. That's something that any pilot or NFO would like to say about their platform, but the fact is that pretty much all other aircraft train A LOT. The EP-3 is always performing real-world operations, so that's pretty cool. As an NFO on there, you'll play with some pretty cool toys. However, on the P-3, you'll start out at a navigator/communicator. This job, from what I hear.... sucks. BUT! When you get qualed in that and a new NFO comes up through the pipeline to the squadron, you'll get moved up to Tactical Officer. Here you get to play with some pretty sweet toys as well. They're currently upgrading P-3's to give them all this anti-surface capability, so they're getting cooler and cooler. They're shooting missiles now. That's right, the Orion can perform strike. The SLAM-ER (Stand-Off Land Attack Missile - Extended Range) allows the P-3 to put a guided missile on target without getting itself into a threat envelope, so that's just cool. Not to mention that P-3 guys don't go to the boat, they get Per Diem (lots of money on deployment) and deploy to cool places. I could go on about the Orion, but I'll stop there.
The Prowler is the one community where the NFO's are so far from being the fifth wheel, it's not even funny. Think about it, it's a four seater aircraft with one pilot. The pilots are already outnumbered 3-1. The front seat NFO will serve as a navigator. While this is not the position of choice among P-3 NFO's, it is with the Prowler guys 'cause they get a good view. There is no view forward from the back seat of a Prowler. Your equipment goes from floor to ceiling, but you'll get a view to the side and above. The two guys in the backseat are called ECMO's (Electronics Counter-Measure Officers). These guys do stand-off jamming so that the strike/fighters can go in and do their strike without much of a SAM threat, because those radars should be inoperable thanks to the jamming capabilities of the Prowler. However, the Prowler has nothing to protect itself with. An 18 or 14 or two will usually escort it, because the only missile the Prowler carries is HARM (high-speed anti-radiation missile). This is pretty cool. It's completely fire-and-forget. It will find the source of a radar pulse, and attack it. Even if the source is turned off, the missile will go to the last known origin of the radar. So, it's an awesome platform to have, not a bad one to be an NFO in, though it can get boring sometimes, as far as I understand it. This is because the capabilities that you have are so huge, you can't really test them all that much without shutting down communications all over where ever you're training.
Okay... Oh, career. If you're interested in a career, get into P-3's or F/A-18F's. The Tomcats are going away, though they'll transition into the 18, it's nice to get in on the bottom floor. EA-6's, by the time we're ready for command, it might be a good community for that, but right now, it's tough. When we got rid of the A-6 (for whatever reason we did), a whole lot of LT's got moved into the Prowler and some just kind of got lost in the mix and left the navy. Now there's tons of 0-4's in the community trying to make it, but it's kind of overflowed. There's also a general feeling in the Navy the we need to streamline aircraft. As we went from F-14's and A-6's to F/A-18's and EA-6's, we're starting to give aircraft multiroles. This is good for several reasons, one being that it makes maintenance a heck of a lot easier. So the word on the street now is that they're looking into making an F/A-18G, the Growler to replace the EA-6. We'll see if that happens, but even from within the community members are saying that it's a job that could be done by two people with today's technology. The E-2 will be around for a while to, and they're upgrading its systems as we speak as well. Here's some good news about Super Hornets for NFO's. They're getting rid of the S-3, so we're going to be out a tanker. F/A-18E's are not currently slated to take over the tanking role. This is a pilot-only aircraft, so we won't waste any more of the FO's time tanking. So the planes that have the most benefits and hold for a promising future are the P-3s and Super Hornets. Oh, I know there's talk about changing out the P-3 and fixing up a 737 to do the same mission, but this is only a change in aircraft, not in the community. So your job is pretty solid there. Pilots tend to want to get out of P-3's and into the airlines (the job is more exciting for FO's than pilots), so NFO's have a great shot at command in that community. Okay, I think that's enough for now.
pdt, where are you in the pipeline, you started last July?