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66 Avionics Technician Reviews

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Avionics Technician at United States Navy

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Great experiences while serving with the Navy."

What do you like about working at United States Navy?

"Challenges, work environment and mission focus."

What don't you like about working at United States Navy?

"No personal life, bad leadership."

Avionics Technician at Solar Turbines

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"This is an excellent company if yo ucan get into the engineering side of the house"

What do you like about working at Solar Turbines?

"The complex product of Gas Turbines, it is really exciting working and troubleshooting equipment with up to 25,000 hp"

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Review your technical knowledge, this place is technically complex"

What don't you like about working at Solar Turbines?

"The union rules and some of the mangement were interns."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Please place proper skilled people in positions that they are quilified for"

Avionics Technician at Northrop Grumman
in Calverton, NY

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Excellent place to work, challenging and rewarding. When you see your jet fly away straight and level you know you did your job right."

What do you like about working at Northrop Grumman?

"Challenging, rewarding, great pay, really a great place to work each day."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Look forward to a great job."

What don't you like about working at Northrop Grumman?

"When in Iran with this company different rules applied and made it a difficult time."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"State side A+, world wide needs some work."

Avionics Technician at United States Marine Corps
in San Diego, CA

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Great growing opportunity."

What do you like about working at United States Marine Corps?

"Travel and opportunity."

What don't you like about working at United States Marine Corps?

"Little family time."

Avionics Technician at General Atomics
in Palmdale, CA

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Keep your resume' updated"

What do you like about working at General Atomics?

"Getting to work on the newest generation of UAV's is awsome."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Keep your options open."

What don't you like about working at General Atomics?

"Management needs help."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Some things never change."

Avionics Technician at Delta Air Lines
in Erlanger, KY

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"I have enjoyed working at Comair, I drive 150 each day to get to work, and would continue."

What do you like about working at Delta Air Lines?

"Mobility to move within the company to stay fresh and challenged. The ability to stay put if you wish. The company worked with my school schedule the entire time."

What don't you like about working at Delta Air Lines?

"Some management lacked knowledge of their assignment, promoted from one area as a mechanic to manage another department."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"I like the management as a whole. Anything can be discussed with most of them. They are not your pals but they help you with your work needs."

Avionics Technician at L-3
in Greenville, TX

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Inexperienced manual laborers attempting to manage complex, technical situations"

What do you like about working at L-3?

"The compensation was fitting for the occupation."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Well, if you can somehow turn a blind eye to the people who are supervising you (whom were all hired around the same time about 2 years ago from VERY large corporations such as McDonald's and Andy's Used Car Sales' and no, this is not an exaggeration, these are REAL examples of 2 supervisors involved in my daily activities as I TRY to accomplish what is known as avionics while they grunt and spit at each other.) Then you'll do great! The pay is good, you can have PLENTY of overtime (see also: Mandatory 60 and sometimes 70 hour workweeks, no days off.) and you like people with no experience telling you what you've accomplished is incorrect when the Technical Data states clearly (in English) that what you've done IS IN FACT, CORRECT... Then by all means, go interview! Dress casual, don't bother bringing any certifications you've earned other than an A&P if you have one, oh, and if you're a smoker, don't have tobacco products in your car (Yes, they FIRE you, and I've seen it done, for having tobacco products in your own vehicle.) I'm no advocate of Lung Cancer, but I AM a Veteran, and like to see Americans actually HAVE freedoms. I like to believe I've helped out on that for us all in a small way. And may whoever your supreme being of choice is, help you if you've actually read this whole thing without laughing. ;-) Seriously, it's not a good place to be, but a nice place to make a buck if you can tune out the big game of Who's Dumber than me that is known as management. Or if by chance you're going to be at another L3 location (NOT Greenville, TX) Then you may have a better experience. I also know the average timespan an avionics person stays at L3 Greenville is less than 2 years. When the recent group (over 50 avionics techs that actually HAVE experience) came to L3's HireFest 2009 (Which all but 2 were hired because anything is better than nothing) The force in my hangar was at less than 1/4 of what it is currently."

What don't you like about working at L-3?

"Just about everything else, really. Management makes knee-jerk (aka shotgun) decisions, rarely consulting Technical Data which has been mandatory for years due to the nature of the DoD contract they are working within. The facility is accustomed to supervising inexperienced personnel with no formal aviation training, giving the workplace a very manual labor feel, which avionics is far from. Management also sets goals that are physically impossible i.e. Budgeting 330 hours work of work left on 1 job (of about 26 left on a certain aircraft), while stating the part needed to install would not be attainable for 3 weeks due to budget issues, then claiming the aircraft should be completely finished in 3 days if everybody works hard. No, not only can you ask your people to Work Harder when they are on mandatory 60 hour work week, you also cannot do 8 days worth of work in 3. Sure, maybe you can cut a corner here and there if you're careful and your people are experienced, but we're talking over 50% reduction in time/funds budgeted for maintenance. In a project that L3 has been involved with for well over a decade now, you would assume they would be more accustomed to the process than making such ridiculous statements. Then, of course, who to blame other than the technicians, right It's the technicians' fault for not performing maintenance at over 2x the speed that it's ever been accomplished at that facility."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"I feel that people in management positions should have achieved a mastery of basic algebra at that point in their careers, which they apparently have not. (750 hrs of routine jobs + 330 hrs for a major repair = 1080 hours needed to complete said work for a crew of 13. 1080/13 =83.1 (rounded up) hours of maintenance if all 13 members of said crew are at work, on aircraft at all times. On 10 hour shifts, which is what is standard for them, you can expect the work to be completed in just a bit over 8 working days (two weeks if we were on 40 hr weeks... Good thing we're on mandatory 60hr weeks though!)So to then make claims that the aircraft will be done in 3 days shows everyone involved that you lack basic mathematics skills, and I personally do not wish to work beneath someone at an elementary mathematics level. While I am no Calculus wizard, nor have I ever claimed to be, I do understand that 8 is not 3. Although I was looked at as lacking professional attitude when I SINGLE-HANDEDLY solved this exact issue for management, making their impossible forecast possible: Print in Landscape mode, and every time the 8 comes, just unplug the printer after it's printed only half of the 8... Then it actually does equal 3."

Avionics Technician at United States Navy
in Norfolk, VA

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Join the Navy - see the world. It's true."

Avionics Technician at United States Navy

What do you like about working at United States Navy?

"Job security."

What don't you like about working at United States Navy?

"Enlistment means you cannot quit."

Avionics Technician at United States Air Force

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Stepping stone."

What do you like about working at United States Air Force?

"Travel, responsibility."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Bring credentials."

What don't you like about working at United States Air Force?

"Management lifers."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Unique challenge to manage young people from various backgrounds and beliefs. too rigid with dogmatic policies."

Avionics Technician at Aerotech
in Lake City, FL

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Questionable"

What do you like about working at Aerotech?

"A work place."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"I chose to move to get the job. Make sure the job is worth your effort before you make all those changes."

What don't you like about working at Aerotech?

"Do not honor contracts."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Be people friendly."

Avionics Technician at United States Navy
in San Diego, CA

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Military, has its pros and cons."

What do you like about working at United States Navy?

"Good training, see the world."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Choose a job that provides relevant experience for civilian life."

What don't you like about working at United States Navy?

"Captivity."

Avionics Technician at United States Air Force
in Sullivan, MO

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"It was a place to start."

What do you like about working at United States Air Force?

"They trained me to work on radar/communication/navigations/and ecm. It was a place start and met some good people."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Once you sign on the line,you are owned by the military, both in the physical sense and under ucmj."

What don't you like about working at United States Air Force?

"The technical orders where simple enough that a monkey could work on this equipment. Management and counterproductive rules create a nightmare. The work could of been done with less people and more efficiently."

Avionics Technician at United States Marine Corps

What do you like about working at United States Marine Corps?

"Job performance/mission accomplishment was the only concern."

What don't you like about working at United States Marine Corps?

"Cut backs required deployment more often."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Never put a person in management who does not know the jobs of his subborninates."

Avionics Technician at Aerometals
in Aurora, OR

Please give us a one liner to describe this review.

"Laid back job."

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