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19d mos hat9/3/2023 ![]() ![]() Suggestions to do anything fraudulent, immoral or illegal are not tolerated.Ħ. This also applies to discussing exploits in course software.ĥ. Asking for or providing the answers to online or in-class military courses or tests is not allowed. Same for fundraising requests and ads for your products, as well as survey/research requests or petitions.Ĥ. Click here or on "wiki" in the top tab menu. ![]() This subreddit has a wiki page containing information and links to answered questions. Weekly Question Thread (N00b thread)įor all of your joining and reclassing needs. This subreddit is geared toward the United States Army, but all are welcome to join regardless of military service. Thank you.Weekly Question Thread Recruiter Thread Welcome to /r/army If your good with guns and can work with trucks and vehicles, I would consider a scout position, because any team will find you as a valuable asset. I would put yourself on one side or the other, and choose the position that utilizes your skill-sets the best. Either/or is a good choice, but one must choose the one that is right for him/her. 11B handles high stress situations as well, but most time on base or in the field will be working with a platoon leader and your small arm's weaponry. In other words you would be a good scout if you had discipline and confidence with working on vehicles and equipment, and if you are confident as a leader in a team. Expect to train not only as a combatant but as a recon group, responsible for knowing his vehicle and operating it's components under heavy stress situations. ![]() The army has a lot of MO schools and this one requires a different set of training all together. You can expect a lot of time on the roads aka (deserts), searching out IEDs, or exploiting enemy positions. Overall, I'd say go with Cavalry, though of course I'm biased. Of course Heavy Cavalry at least (I only ever served in a Heavy Cavalry Regiment) has more firepower per troop than most infantry Battalions have, which is DEFINITELY a point in its favor when things get hot. That being said, it's also alittle more dangerous, since the Cavalry is usually the first "in contact", and frankly it doesn't take much to kill a CFV if you run into armor or significant quantities of ATGM. The infantryman, however, gets to spend more time on the small arms range, forced marches, and generally NOT having to tinker with machinery more complex than what they will carry day to day.įrankly I found my short term as a cav scout to be rather interesting, and I certainly learned more about ground combat than the basic training I got could ever have covered. He also spends more time on map reading at the lower skill levels, as well as direction of fire, hasty minefield placement, obstacle reduction or avoidance (facines are of little use to leg infantry) and a bunch of other things. ![]() A Cavalry Scout is first and foremost a versatile combatant.Ī Cav scout, for instance, would spend some of his days at the motor pool servicing his vehicle, something leg infantry doesn't worry much about (but Mech infantry does). Note that the 19D training is a superset (not including speciality schools) of Infantry training, and combines elements of Armor, Combat Engineering, MANPAD ADA, and other things. ![]()
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