U.S. Marine Corps MOS Career Guide

6287 — Fixed-Wing Aircraft Safety Equipment Mechanic, F/A-18:
Civilian Career Guide

Marine Corps 6287 experience can support F/A-18 safety and survival systems, repair-station component work, aircraft maintenance, aviation quality, and maintenance leadership. The strongest transition documents exact systems, inspection intervals, repairs, tests, technical data, records, discrepancies, and qualifications, then separates military certification from FAA privileges, repair-station authority, explosives handling requirements, and employer sign-off.

Aircraft mechanics median: $78,680
Quality inspectors median: $47,460
NAVMC 1200.1L and FY27 continuity verified
NAVMC source note
NAVMC 1200.1L assigns 6287 mechanics to inspect, maintain, and repair aircraft-centered safety equipment and systems for F/A-18 aircraft. Required training includes Aviation Structural Mechanic E Safety Equipment Core and the F/A-18 Environmental Control System and Safety Equipment Organizational Maintenance Course. Prerequisites include full qualification criteria and medical requirements for explosives handlers.
Start Here

Choose the part you need first.

F/A-18 Environmental Control and Safety Equipment Technician$48k – $120kDirect defense aviation bridge
FAA Repair Station Safety Equipment / Component Technician$48k – $120kAbout 13,100 aviation openings yearly
Aircraft Mechanic / A&P Technician$48k – $120kAbout 13,100 aviation openings yearly
Aviation Manufacturing Quality Inspector$35k – $76k69,900 quality openings yearly
Aircraft Maintenance Supervisor$48k – $120kMaintenance supervisor benchmark
See full role breakdowns: demand data, hiring notes, and employer expectations →
Document the Life-Critical Work
Safety-system experience becomes credible when the component, interval, authority, test, and result are visible.

Your blueprint should separate F/A-18 safety and survival systems, inspections, time-controlled items, repairs, testing, technical data, records, qualifications, hazard boundaries, and leadership, then map each area to FAA and employer requirements.

Build My 6287 Blueprint →
Section 01

Top Civilian Role Matches for 6287

F/A-18 Environmental Control and Safety Equipment Technician Closest systems bridge
$48k – $120k

This is the closest platform bridge for 6287 Marines supporting F/A-18 defense, depot, contractor, or modification programs. The official training path includes environmental control and safety equipment, but the resume should name only systems and tasks actually performed. Employers need inspection intervals, maintenance actions, tests, technical data, records, and qualification boundaries. Quantify aircraft, systems, components, inspections, discrepancies, time-controlled items, repairs, first-pass acceptance, turnaround, repeat faults, schedule completion, and technicians trained without exposing controlled details.

Safety systemsSurvival systemsF/A-18Aviation maintenance
Direct defense aviation bridge
Source: BLS OOH: Aircraft Mechanics · Median $78,680 (May 2024)
FAA Repair Station Safety Equipment / Component Technician
$48k – $120k

Repair stations and approved operators maintain specialized aircraft components under their ratings, manuals, training programs, and quality systems. A 6287 background fits when the Marine can document component-level inspections, maintenance, repairs, testing, records, calibrated tools, and quality handoffs. An FAA repairman certificate is employer-specific and requires the qualifying employer's recommendation; it is not portable like an A&P. Show component families, maintenance depth, test equipment, discrepancies, accepted work, rework, turnaround, documentation accuracy, and employer training readiness.

Repair stationComponentsFAA repairmanTechnical records
About 13,100 aviation openings yearly
Source: BLS OOH: Aircraft Mechanics · Median $78,680 (May 2024)
Aircraft Mechanic / A&P Technician
$48k – $120k

Airlines, cargo carriers, manufacturers, contractors, and repair stations hire mechanics to inspect, service, repair, test, and document aircraft systems. The FAA decides whether documented 6287 experience supports Airframe, Powerplant, or both rating eligibility, and safety-equipment work alone may not cover both ratings. Build records by month, aircraft, system, component, task, test, tool, and supervision. Employers may also require platform, operator, or task-specific training. Quantify maintenance actions, discrepancies, return-to-service handoffs, first-pass acceptance, and repeat-defect reduction.

FAA AirframeA&P pathMROAircraft records
About 13,100 aviation openings yearly
Source: BLS OOH: Aircraft Mechanics · Median $78,680 (May 2024)
Aviation Manufacturing Quality Inspector
$35k – $76k

6287 Marines with documented collateral inspection, measurement, records review, or corrective-action duties can target aviation quality roles. Routine self-inspection does not equal independent quality authority. Employers need specification reading, inspection criteria, calibrated tools, traceability, defect documentation, nonconformance control, and clear reporting. Show the actual authority held and the handoff to quality or engineering. Quantify components or maintenance actions inspected, findings, first-pass acceptance, rework, repeat defects, corrective actions, audit results, and documentation accuracy.

Quality inspectionTraceabilityNonconformanceCorrective action
69,900 quality openings yearly
Source: BLS OOH: Quality Control Inspectors · Median $47,460 (May 2024)
Aircraft Maintenance Supervisor
$48k – $120k

This is a senior path for 6287 Marines who led people, schedules, qualifications, inspections, safety, tools, records, and maintenance performance rather than only completing individual tasks. Employers need team size, shift or work-center scope, workload, training, quality, schedule, risk, and measurable outcomes. FAA privileges still depend on the work and organization, and supervisor titles do not create return-to-service authority. Quantify technicians, aircraft, systems, inspections, qualifications, overdue actions, turnaround, first-pass acceptance, repeat defects, safety performance, and readiness.

Maintenance leadershipWork controlTrainingQuality
Maintenance supervisor benchmark
Source: BLS: Maintenance and Repair Supervisors · Median $78,300 (May 2024)
Section 02

Transferable Strengths: What Civilian Employers See

Life-Critical Inspection Discipline
Aircraft safety equipment demands exact intervals, condition assessment, approved criteria, complete records, and verified results. Civilian employers need the system, inspection type, discrepancy, limit, maintenance response, test, and acceptance handoff, supported by volume and first-pass performance.
Environmental Control and Safety-System Integration
The 6287 training path joins F/A-18 environmental control and aircraft safety equipment. Translate the specific systems, interfaces, inspections, servicing, component work, tests, and records you actually handled. Quantify faults, maintenance actions, turnaround, first-pass acceptance, and repeat discrepancies.
Time-Controlled Item and Configuration Management
Safety-system readiness depends on accurate status, due dates, configuration, traceability, and timely maintenance. Employers value technicians who can prevent overdue actions and documentation gaps. Show items tracked, upcoming requirements, completed actions, schedule adherence, record accuracy, and discrepancy closure.
Technical Data, Tools, and Test Control
Controlled maintenance requires current procedures, correct tools, calibrated equipment, documented test conditions, and clear results. Translate military publications into approved technical-data use and process compliance, while preserving boundaries around restricted details and employer-specific procedures.
Hazard Awareness and Qualification Boundaries
NAVMC prerequisites include medical requirements for explosives handlers, reinforcing the field's hazard controls. Civilian value comes from disciplined handling, storage, accountability, protective measures, and escalation within actual qualification. Do not claim a civilian explosives or hazardous-material license unless separately earned.
Section 03

Common Mistakes 6287 Marines Make in the Civilian Job Search

01
Calling the Work Safety Equipment Without Naming the System
The phrase is too broad for civilian hiring. Identify whether the work involved environmental control, aircraft safety, survival equipment, or another documented component category, then name the inspection interval, maintenance action, test, technical data, records, and accepted result. Protect controlled details while quantifying volume and outcomes.
02
Assuming Military Qualification Grants FAA Authority
Military qualification does not automatically issue an FAA Airframe, Powerplant, A&P, or repairman certificate. The FAA reviews mechanic experience, while repairman authority depends on employment, recommendation, specialty, and organization. Preserve records and describe your actual authority without implying civilian return-to-service privileges.
03
Overstating Explosives or Independent Inspection Credentials
Meeting military medical and qualification requirements for hazardous duties does not create a civilian explosives, hazmat, or quality credential. Routine self-inspection also differs from independent acceptance authority. State qualifications, duties, and handoffs accurately, then identify any civilian training still required.
Section 04

Credentials That Strengthen a 6287 Transition

FAA Repairman Certificate: Employer-Specific Path
Cost FAA issuance $0; employer training costs varyTime 18 months practical experience or FAA-acceptable formal trainingFormat Employer recommendation and FAA application

FAA Repairman guidance describes specialized authority for an employee recommended by a qualifying repair station, air carrier, or operator. It cannot be obtained independently before the job and is limited to the recommending employer and assigned duties. It can fit specialized safety-equipment or component work.

Specialized employer authority · Strong repair-station fit
FAA Mechanic Certificate: Airframe and Powerplant
Cost FAA issuance is $0; commercial testing and examiner fees varyTime 18 months for one rating or 30 months concurrent for bothFormat Eligibility review, knowledge, oral, and practical tests

FAA mechanic guidance explains how documented military experience may support eligibility. An FAA inspector determines whether the experience covers Airframe, Powerplant, or both. Safety-equipment experience does not automatically establish both ratings, and every applicant must complete the applicable testing.

Broad aviation credential · Requires documented qualifying experience
ASQ Certified Quality Inspector
Cost $460 exam; members save $100; $260 retakeTime Three years' experience, with eligible education waiversFormat Computer-based certification exam

ASQ Certified Quality Inspector fits 6287 veterans with genuine measurement, specification, inspection, traceability, and reporting experience. A technical, military, trade, or college credential may waive up to two years of the three-year experience requirement.

Quality signal · Best for documented inspection authority
Section 05

Resume Translation: From 6287 Safety Equipment to Civilian Aviation

The 6287 resume should show the F/A-18 system, interval, task, authority, technical data, test, record, and accepted result behind each maintenance claim.

Before: Safety-equipment terminology without system depth
Served as an F/A-18 aircraft safety equipment mechanic. Inspected, maintained, and repaired safety and survival systems while supporting aircraft readiness.
After: Civilian aviation language with proof
Inspected, maintained, repaired, tested, and documented aircraft-centered safety and survival systems across [number] F/A-18 aircraft using approved technical data, calibrated tools, scheduled intervals, and configuration records. Completed [number] inspections and [number] maintenance actions per [period], identifying [number] discrepancies and achieving [percent] first-pass acceptance with [percent] reduction in repeat faults. Tracked [number] time-controlled items and closed [percent] before due date while maintaining [percent] record accuracy. Coordinated parts, work control, quality, and specialty support to return systems to service within [time]. Trained and evaluated [number] technicians on inspection criteria, hazard controls, testing, documentation, and escalation, producing [qualification, readiness, quality, or safety result].
The 6287 Translation Formula
Military term Civilian translation Proof to show
Aircraft safety equipment aircraft-installed safety and survival system inspection, maintenance, repair, testing, and documentation aircraft, systems, components, actions, tests, and accepted results
Scheduled inspection interval-based inspection against approved criteria, discrepancy documentation, and maintenance closure inspection types, volume, findings, overdue rate, and first-pass acceptance
Time-change item life-limited or time-controlled component tracking, forecasting, replacement, and traceability items tracked, due dates, on-time completion, records, and configuration accuracy
Explosives-handler requirements hazard-controlled work performed within documented medical, training, handling, and authorization boundaries qualifications, training, controlled actions, inspections, and safety record
Operational test post-maintenance functional verification using approved procedure, calibrated equipment, and recorded results tests, equipment, pass rate, discrepancies, retests, and records
Aircraft readiness schedule-aligned discrepancy closure, quality handoff, restored availability, and auditable maintenance records turnaround, schedule completion, repeat faults, availability, and documentation accuracy
Always quantify aircraft, systems, components, inspections, time-controlled items, discrepancies, repairs, tests, first-pass acceptance, repeat faults, turnaround, record accuracy, qualifications, personnel trained, readiness, and safety
Last updated July 2026 using BLS May 2024 aircraft mechanic data, BLS Quality Control Inspector data, and BLS maintenance supervisor data. Credential requirements and fees checked with FAA repairman guidance, FAA mechanic guidance, and ASQ. Classification and duties verified in NAVMC 1200.1L. NAVMC 1200.1M was checked and retains the specialty for FY27.
Section 06

6287 Civilian Career FAQs

What civilian jobs fit Marine Corps MOS 6287?
The closest paths are F/A-18 safety and survival systems technician, repair-station component technician, aircraft mechanic, aviation quality inspector, and senior maintenance or aerospace test roles when experience supports them. Fit depends on documented systems, maintenance depth, FAA status, platform requirements, inspection authority, and leadership scope.
Does 6287 automatically qualify someone for an FAA A&P certificate?
No. The FAA reviews documented practical experience to determine eligibility for Airframe, Powerplant, or both ratings, and applicants must pass the required tests. Safety-equipment experience may support an application, but it does not automatically cover the full experience required for both ratings.
How is an FAA repairman certificate different from an A&P?
A repairman certificate is tied to a qualifying employer, recommendation, specialty, and assigned duties. It generally does not move with the employee. An A&P is a broader personal mechanic certificate with separate experience and testing requirements. The best path depends on the job and documented experience.
What should a 6287 Marine document before separation?
Record aircraft, systems, component categories, inspection types and intervals, time-controlled items, discrepancies, maintenance and repairs, tests, calibrated tools, technical-data use, first-pass acceptance, repeat faults, turnaround, records, quality handoffs, qualifications, technicians trained, readiness, and safety results. Protect controlled technical information.
Build the Right Safety-Systems Bridge
Use military qualification as evidence, not as automatic civilian authority.

CommandPath uses your F/A-18 systems, components, intervals, inspections, repairs, tests, records, qualifications, quality duties, and leadership to distinguish safety-equipment, repair-station, A&P, quality, and supervisor paths.

Build My 6287 Blueprint →
Not out yet?
Just picked 6287, or still choosing between jobs? Save your pathway now and get an immediate brief on what this field becomes. Private, free, takes 90 seconds.
Save my pathway →