Late 80's. I wanted to get a trade behind me and I couldn't get a corps transfer to the Electrical & Mechanical Engineers, and decided RNZAC wasn't going to leave me much of a career post-army. The only qualifications I got there was a couple of classes on my driver's licence.
I know that one. I signed up for a commission in the infantry for the 'glamour' (i wanted guards or cav but was bluntly told as my family didnt have a title or a private income of 60k a year or more or an estate it was highly unlikely).
Really?!? The British Army is still hung up on elitist crap like that? I'm rather stunned. In New Zealand, you just had to have a reasonable education if you wanted to apply for Officer Cadets School. A year later you'd be commisioned.
When I was training, our platoon commander was a lieutenant that was fresh out of OCS and only 19 years old. He could pretty much match anyone on the rifle range and could out run nearly everyone in the platoon. I guess he thought he had to prove himself. Still a down to earth sort of guy though, really likeable - for a youngster. I was 4 years older than him at the time and the oldest guy in the platoon. Everyone was calling me Grandad, and that made me feel old.
I know what you mean about joining a support corp. Seems placements within them were fairly limited. And from what I hear lately the British Army seems to be contracting out a lot of work to civilian contractors these days.
If I had have stayed in I would have been driving M113 APCs and Scorpion light tanks, the two main vehicles we had in the Armoured Corps at the time. As it was, only a few years later they retired the Scorpions and the armoured squadron got redesignated as a mounted rifle company, so I would have seen out my days operating NZLAVs. Not exactly the Armoured Corps that I envisaged. The only transferable skill would have been the ability to drive a bulldozer.
Still, it was a fun experience.