Posted November 08, 2015


That said, I liked your story. Did you learn any useful soft skills during your years in the military?
To answer your question, I learned a lot of skills in the military but not a lot that could help me in the civilian world. Ironically I told the officer who actually processed my paperwork that I wanted a position that provided some technical skills I could use and wasn't a code word for "obvious target" on a battlefield. I wound up as an electronic systems repairer for spy planes. It was actually a lot more awesome than it sounds, I learned to read schematics, analyze circuit boards and could de-solder bad components and solder new ones in their place. I remember one time when one of our planes had just took off and the crew radioed in that the entire surveillance system (which included IR Cameras, signal jammers and the equipment to monitor radio and cell phone transmissions) had completely died, there was no power in any part of the system. This was not a training exercise, we were running a live mission, so the plane immediately turned around and came in for a landing. The other techs and I went into a frenzy discussing all the possibilities that could cause a total power failure in our equipment but not the entire plane. The system was designed so a single power source could be used, almost like a string of Christmas lights. The main difference was that you weren't supposed to lose the whole system should one "bulb" go out, unless it was the first bulb in the string. So I grabbed a tool box in one hand and a replacement unit in the other, which together weighed about 40 pounds (or 18kg for my friends across the pond), and ran out onto the runway and met the plane as it landed and came to a stop. I hopped on board, swapped out the parts and got the whole system up and running again. Unfortunately that's not something I could really put on a resume.
In fact most of my electronics skills are now obsolete, circuit boards now use multi-layer technology so nobody is soldering them by hand anymore and the planes I used to work on have all been replaced by UAVs. I do have my own multimeter and oscilloscope but haven't used them for anything beyond fixing the dryer in about a decade. My knowledge of firearms, explosives and searching for land mines are also no longer helpful. The Army did give me a greater attention to detail however, I'm much more observant than my peers.