thomasm77 said:
I should rephrase: The Combat Engineers are currently under manned (as is everyone from the sounds of things). From my understanding, this means it could be slightly more difficult leaving the Corps, as it is a competition. Not to get into any new trade, but to get out of current one.
All determined by the TES and 'health' of your trade. Green trades = 2% of TES allowed OT out, 1% for Amber, 0.5% for Red. There is a OUTCAP matrix on the DIN if you search Basic Production Documents. It will have the OT OUTCAP for your trade for this FY listed there.
Training: 6 months or so in Winnipeg, depending on how much of a gap there is between your basic flight training -BAQC (Basic Air Qualification? 8 weeks) and your IAQC (Initial Air Qualification? 16 weeks). After completing this, posted either east or west, then out to either Greenwood for MOAT(Maritime Operational Air Training) or Shearwater for OTU(Operational Trg Unit) for another 24 weeks.
Check out the changes coming to the trg system and 'ways' now in play and coming down the pipe that Eagle Eye View posted earlier. FYI, he is currently an AES Op instructor in Winnipeg for the initial trg phase.
BAQC (Basic AESOP Qual Course, QL3) was about 3 months before with IAQC (Intermediate AESOP Qual Course, QL5 / flying phase) scheduled for 2 months but subject to flying schedule extensions.
MOAT and OTU, call it 6 months. Currently, posting happen between Winnipeg and MOAT/OTU, then off you go to get a platform qual.
Postings:
-Rotary MH , either Esquimalt or Shearwater. I'm guessing that these postings will involve a lot of time out to sea with the navy. I'm curious to know how long these deployments are usually? There's a lot of hearsay in the army world about how it all works, and I'd like to be clear going forward. Keeping in mind that coming from the army I'm not too concerned about time away. It's all part of signing on the dotted line.
I'll leave that for a fling-winger. ^-^
Fixed wing LRP, either Comox or Greenwood. Deployments can last anywhere from weeks to months. Plenty of flights daily. Coastal patrols? Or am I out to lunch on that assumption?
There are types of patrols flown along coasts. Deployments can be planned in advance or sometimes happen 'overnight/quickly'. Not much more to say about that on here.
With either platform I'm understanding there is plenty of flying, and your op tempo is high. You'd all prefer not to have to babysit, and noobs are expected to know their job and perform.
It is different in the army, for LRP operators at least and I will assume even more so for MH, as they are 1 AESOP/crew. But, in LRP, once you are done MOAT and onto your OJTP and continuation trg, you are expected to be pro-active in progressing your training, more so than the Army - it's not a hand-held exercise as much as the army does.
Family life - I'm not sure if this question will come up in the interview, but I'd like to be prepared for it. So, is there anything I should know in respects to it? Are AESOp's gone 250 days a year? Is the a major difference between MH and Fixed Wing for time gone (this ties back into my earlier question about MH deployments)? What can my family expect if I make it into this trade? I'd like to have us prepared and in the know.
After MOAT and on a crew, you won't be gone that much (250/year) but could do half a year in the current op tempo. That will likely slow down some before you hit an LRP crew if you are posted that way but, I would say it is safe to say 4 months away, spread out over the year, is a conservative number at this time.
I won't guess at the MH guys but generally speaking, they may go away less often but for longer stints - attached to a HMCS.
Am I misinformed on anything, or is here any other pertinent info I should have?
Thanks in advance.
Cheers,
Tom
I would say, get a general understanding of what AES Ops do on the LRP and MH fleet. Some of that you won't get in the clear on here but if you could arrange a phone call or email with one in the New Year, I think that would give you some more applic info on the actual job. :2c: