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US ARMY: Avionic Communications Equipment Repairer (94L)

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Uploaded by on Oct 27, 2008

http://imcom.korea.army.mil

Welcome to US Army, IMCOM-Korea

IMCOM-Korea supports Soldiers, Civilians and Family Members with Army-standard installation facilities, spacious housing areas, 5-star restaurants, new first-rate recreational centers, and spectacular access to Korean food and culture.

Korea is a great place to live, work or visit. Whether this is your first tour to Korea or a return assignment, you can look forward to a personally and professionally rewarding experience in the Land of the Morning Calm.

To learn more about living and serving with the US Army in Korea, visit us online at http://imcom.korea.army.mil

To learn about serving in the US Army, visit http://www.goarmy.com

As one of the largest ground forces in the world, the U.S. Army needs to make sure that all forces can get the correct information. The Army communications maintenance team is responsible for making sure that all communications equipment is in top working order. This equipment allows the Army to track and direct troop, aircraft and watercraft movements.

An Avionic Communications Equipment Repairer is an essential member of the Army communications maintenance team and is primarily responsible for performing intermediate and depot maintenance on aircraft communications equipment.

Some of your duties as an Avionic Communications Equipment Repairer may include:

- Maintaining, testing and repairing communications equipment
- Installing and repairing circuits and wiring
- Calibrating and aligning equipment components
- Troubleshooting faulty communications equipment
- Replacing faulty components and parts
- Modifying communication equipment
- Performing operator maintenance on tools and test equipment

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  • Hate to tell you people interested in going into the Army and learning a new skill, but we couldn't hire ex-military avionics techs and make any money using them. There is little transition from military to civilian occupational skills...it took too much training to get ex-military techs up to speed. If you want training in this, go to Spartan School of Aeronautics or another civilian tech school/college and get a good education.

  • I've been a law enforcement/business radio, telecommunications, satellite & FLIR bench & field tech all my life, but never been in the military and I envy the hell out of you guys getting to work with milcomms. I spent a year in Middle East as civilian FLIR/antenna towers/VoIP/microwave tech, and it was awesome working with U.S. Army & Marines, getting to fly on Blackhawks and transports. Great experience. My HIGHEST respect, admiration & appreciation to ALL of you.~texascommtech/dean in abilene

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