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Salary, Retirement, and Relationships

Started by PercMastaFTW, Apr 27, 2013, 06:02

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PercMastaFTW

1. I've been reading that the starting salary of a nuke is around 25-30 dollars an hour in the civilian sector. So around 50k a year? Do most people take a civ job right after their time in service (or would it be better to stick with military)? Do any nukes get 6 figures as starting?


2. Also, retirement. Is it possible to retire after 20 years as a nuke (do most do this)? I've tallied up the numbers and after 20 years in the navy, you make only around 600k with your base pay (without bonuses, housing, medical, etc though! About a million with that probably considered). If I went my computer science route, assuming all went well with the field, I would make around 1.2 mill in the same time if I stuck with my starting pay. Do people ever completely retire as a nuke right at the 20 year mark?


3. And finally, relationships. I've been reading how hard it is, especially since this might be my job for 20+ years. How do you meet women? When do you meet women? How do you get to talk more with them? It seems really tough, and I honestly don't want to be single for 20 entire years, and probably more. When do you get off duty etc.?

MacGyver

Quote from: PercMastaFTW on Apr 27, 2013, 06:02
1. I've been reading that the starting salary of a nuke is around 25-30 dollars an hour in the civilian sector. So around 50k a year? Do most people take a civ job right after their time in service (or would it be better to stick with military)? Do any nukes get 6 figures as starting?


2. Also, retirement. Is it possible to retire after 20 years as a nuke (do most do this)? I've tallied up the numbers and after 20 years in the navy, you make only around 600k with your base pay (without bonuses, housing, medical, etc though! About a million with that probably considered). If I went my computer science route, assuming all went well with the field, I would make around 1.2 mill in the same time if I stuck with my starting pay. Do people ever completely retire as a nuke right at the 20 year mark?


3. And finally, relationships. I've been reading how hard it is, especially since this might be my job for 20+ years. How do you meet women? When do you meet women? How do you get to talk more with them? It seems really tough, and I honestly don't want to be single for 20 entire years, and probably more. When do you get off duty etc.?

If you're just worried about money then the military isn't for you.

PercMastaFTW

What about the others? But this is what people have been telling me. I want to know the facts.

Edit: I was originally going to go just 4 years and then to college. But since getting this offer, I've been looking into it as much as I can. Either way, I want to do whatever I decide to the best of my ability and stick with it.

spekkio

Quote from: MacGyver on Apr 27, 2013, 07:29If you're just worried about money then the military isn't for you.
Money is always an issue. No one works for free.

Read thus thread: www.nukeworker.com/forum/index.php?topic=36363.0.

What the monthly base pay is for those paygrades is your lookup.

HydroDave63

Quote from: PercMastaFTW on Apr 27, 2013, 06:02
1. I've been reading that the starting salary of a nuke is around 25-30 dollars an hour in the civilian sector. So around 50k a year? Do most people take a civ job right after their time in service (or would it be better to stick with military)? Do any nukes get 6 figures as starting?


2. Also, retirement. Is it possible to retire after 20 years as a nuke (do most do this)? I've tallied up the numbers and after 20 years in the navy, you make only around 600k with your base pay (without bonuses, housing, medical, etc though! About a million with that probably considered). If I went my computer science route, assuming all went well with the field, I would make around 1.2 mill in the same time if I stuck with my starting pay. Do people ever completely retire as a nuke right at the 20 year mark?


3. And finally, relationships. I've been reading how hard it is, especially since this might be my job for 20+ years. How do you meet women? When do you meet women? How do you get to talk more with them? It seems really tough, and I honestly don't want to be single for 20 entire years, and probably more. When do you get off duty etc.?

1. Usually, usually, rare but possible

2. I'd assume that MicroSatan, Scroogle, Crapple or Fraudbook will most likely offshore any of those plum IT jobs you are planning on...at least that's been the trend for the past 20 years or so. Yes, there some sailors that retire at the 20 year mark, assuming they aren't passed over 3x on promotions, fail PRT, etc.

3. If you *ahem* search the Avogadro's number of posts/threads on all things Navy, you might find that hookups happen anywhere from A school, nuke school (including marriage proposals during class break, find that post!), prototype, or 4 years on the carrier....where additional opportunities such as engineroom watch, fire drills, GQ, fan room field day, shaft alley cleanup, a plethora of opportunities (to get yourself in trouble!) In fact, with 4500 male and 500 female sailors on the carrier , you have excellent odds (of rejection!) How about focusing on how (assuming you enlist) you will provide proper return on our investment and run/maintain the plant, keep yourself alive, underway and not get into trouble! Now go qualify something, nub!!  :P

DSO

Answering your questions:

1) NO

2)Yes..I did, but your only semi-retired

3) Russian Bride catalogs, Mama Sans in the PI will set you up,or turn gay and easily meet other guys while underway......and talk to them also!!

MacGyver

Quote from: spekkio on Apr 27, 2013, 09:39
Money is always an issue. No one works for free.


Strike Two on your (lack of) reading comprehension.

HydroDave63

Quote from: DSO on Apr 27, 2013, 10:06
Answering your questions:

1) NO

2)Yes..I did, but your only semi-retired

3) Russian Bride catalogs, Mama Sans in the PI will set you up,or turn gay and easily meet other guys while underway......and talk to them also!!

In the Mullet-ized fleet, it probably gets you EP evals and extra Award Points on the rating exam... http://usmilitary.about.com/library/milinfo/blnavypromotion3.htm

hamsamich

1 of his posts wasn't about money so looks like reading comp isn't just spekkio's problem.  Just = Only = Entire post.  Re-read his post.

MacGyver

Quote from: hamsamich on Apr 28, 2013, 07:11
1 of his posts wasn't about money so looks like reading comp isn't just spekkio's problem.  Just = Only = Entire post.  Re-read his post.

I have no intention of offering him relationship advice.  Nor will I ask for it from any of you amateur experts.  I've met most of you and most of you have been divorced.    ;)

So if you so desire to be on-topic feel free.

hamsamich

Talking about his post is on topic and your comment was "he just cares about money"  his third point in the post was not about money, so please re-read his post. I'm not giving relationship advice either, but at least I will be accurate about what his initial post was, unlike you.

MacGyver

Quote from: hamsamich on Apr 28, 2013, 07:36
Talking about his post is on topic and your comment was "he just cares about money"  his third point in the post was not about money, so please re-read his post. I'm not giving relationship advice either, but at least I will be accurate about what his initial post was, unlike you.

WOW, thank goodness for you and your second 'accurate' (sic) off-topic post.




Rennhack

Stop bickering, and return to the topic or stop posting please.

PercMastaFTW

Thank you guys soo much for all your great information!!

DLGN25

Hell, after six years, you will probably find something better suited for you then operational engineering.  I did, and most nukes I knew did.  (I became an accountant, a friend became a lawyer and an elected official, some become drunks. It is up to you.)

All naval nuke power gives you is the knowledge you can do better then you thought in whatever you chose to do, and no one outside of nuclear power gives a crap you shimmed rods, or synchronized generators, or brought steam into an engine room.

Shoot, few in the Navy care that you can do any of the above listed tasks.
Surely oak and three-fold brass surrounded his heart who first trusted a frail vessel to a merciless ocean.  Horace

spekkio

One thing for newbies to keep in mind is that retirement at 20 years is 1/2 of base pay at your top 3 year pay avg. All of your allowances, bonuses, and special pays just disappear, which amounts to a sizeable pay cut. If you retire at 20, you can expect to be making roughly 1/4-1/3 what you did while active duty.

HeavyD

In order to "retire" from working when you retire from the Navy, one would need to be a Master Chief (E-9) who lives VERY frugally or a Commander or above (O-5), for the most part.  There are ALWAYS exceptions to everything ;D

This link for data:
http://www.dfas.mil/militarymembers/payentitlements/militarypaytables.html

E-9 over 20 - Base Pay $5617.50 - retirement pay of $2808.75 BEFORE taxes (don't forget Uncle Sam's cut)

O-5 over 20 - Base Pay $8338.80 - retirement pay of $4169.20, again BEFORE taxes.

On a final note, I met my wife while on leave between prototype and my first ship.  We survived the deployments, workups, long work hours, and all the other sucky things that come along with ANY job.  The big difference between the military and the civilian sector is that most civilian jobs don't send you away from your everyday life for 6+ months at a time.

Being in the Navy isn't a horror movie.  You are expected to do things the way you are told to, be where you are told to be when you are told to be, and stay out of trouble.  This, remarkably enough, is similar to what is expected of you in ANY job.  What you do with your free time away from work is your prerogative.

The Navy is also NOT everyone's cup of tea.  My job as a leader in the Navy was to make sure my sailors had all the info they needed to make the best career decision for them, NOT to make the Navy happy about their choice.  For some that means 6 and out, for others it means 30 years.  Ask yourself every 6 months or so "What are my long term goals?  Is what I am doing helping me get there?".  If you can't answer those questions, then don't keep doing what you are doing.

Best of luck to you. 

spekkio

You get 2.5% added for every year over 20. Using an E9, the 20 yr mark is probably a lofty goal (also E9s tend to stick around). Much more likely to be E6-E7 at 20 years, E7-E8 at 20-25 years and E8-E9 at 25-30 years.

For Officers anything over O5 will require more than 20 years.

retired nuke

Quote from: spekkio on May 09, 2013, 05:05
You get 2.5% added for every year over 20. Using an E9, the 20 yr mark is probably a lofty goal (also E9s tend to stick around). Much more likely to be E6-E7 at 20 years, E7-E8 at 20-25 years and E8-E9 at 25-30 years.

For Officers anything over O5 will require more than 20 years.

Not necessarily - knew several E9 <20 - all nukes, most MM, some would be played by Eastwood in a movie - the particular E9 on my boat would have been Harry in Gran Torino.
Remember who you love. Remember what is sacred. Remember what is true.
Remember that you will die, and that this day is a gift. Remember how you wish to live, may the blessing of the Lord be with you

spekkio

I said it was a lofty goal -- as in don't plan on it as a nub because you might not have "it"... that special something that allows you to advance quicker than your peers... not that it can't be done.

HeavyD

Every Reactor Officer I ever served with made O-5 around the 17 year point, making O-6 by 20-22 years.

Master Chief in less than 20 is becoming more and more prevalent, even for some non-Nuke rates. 

Gamecock

Quote from: spekkio on May 09, 2013, 03:14
If you retire at 20, you can expect to be making roughly 1/4-1/3 what you did while active duty.

Which is still "free" money for the rest of your natural life.  Plus healthcare.  Not a bad deal if you ask me.

"If the thought police come... we will meet them at the door, respectfully, unflinchingly, willing to die... holding a copy of the sacred Scriptures in one hand and the US Constitution in the other."

GLW

Quote from: Gamecock on May 10, 2013, 09:00
Which is still "free" money for the rest of your natural life.  Plus healthcare.  Not a bad deal if you ask me.



Don't need the healthcare anymore, everybody gets that nowadays,...

Half of the inducement and reward for good service has been made moot,...

Now it's just down to the question of are the sacrifices of twenty years of service worth whatever pension you snag at retirement,....

The math is different for enlisteds and officers,...

And that point is not really for you Game' as you have already walked that line and know it well,...

That point is for the viewing public who may hear a recruiter still try to use the "medical for life" inducement,...

been there, dun that,... the doormat to hell does not read "welcome", the doormat to hell reads "it's just business"

tucker0104

Quote from: GLW on May 10, 2013, 10:38
Don't need the healthcare anymore, everybody gets that nowadays,...

What do you mean everyone gets free healthcare nowadays?



I was debating joining the navy reserves for a while but ended up changing my mind. A fight with prostate cancer almost sounds better. Just kidding.

Nuclear NASCAR

Quote from: tucker0104 on May 10, 2013, 11:18
What do you mean everyone gets free healthcare nowadays?



I was debating joining the navy reserves for a while but ended up changing my mind. A fight with prostate cancer almost sounds better. Just kidding.

Look again, I don't see "free'' healthcare mentioned above. 
"There is much pleasure to be gained from useless knowledge."

  -Bertrand Russell


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