Carrier aviation has been a topic long ignored by GI Joe. It is perhaps understandable, as your typical ground troops can be deployed in pretty much any backyard, adding to immersion. Carriers on the other hand have a specific look not often replicated within a child's imagination.
That being said, an attempt was made by Hasbro in the 90's. Considering the lack of any further additions to a potentially voluminous series, it didn't sell well. I decided to rectify this with the help of a birthday present I received recently.
Please excuse the overly dramatic lighting
AD3 Job Massey is the conglomeration of several radically different brands of action figure manufacturers. The man himself is a Masterpiece Edition Action Sailor, while most of his equipment is taken from a Hot Toys set which did indeed cover several different rates (not to mention officers).
Considering the color organization of the jerseys aboard Navy vessels, this individual could be any of five rates, but I decided on Aviation Machinist's Mate (AD). As far as I know he should be appropriate for a 1980's carrier, as the dungarees were still issued until the early 90's while the current cranial system had been mostly standardized by the 70's.
I unfortunately misjudged the color of the jersey so it looks violently out of place; I may buy another to help it match up better.
For the most part, the cranial (helmet) works okay, but that's only after some significant work being done, not helped at all by the design decisions made by the manufacturers. I personally have some significant gripes with it, having handled and worn this exact helmet on many occasions. The rear plate can pretty clearly be seen to be 'floating' above the rest of his head, which is not at all how the real cranial works:
This is due to the largely faulty design, wherein the straps used to affix the green plates to the rest of the cranial were entirely too long and used velcro. While velcro is not altogether a bad material, at this scale there is not nearly enough adhesion to provide a secure connection. Furthermore, the velcro panels on the inside of the plates were attached with double sided tape, making it appear more like a 5th grade craft project than a professionally designed and produced consumer product. In its place, I'd suggest the snaps used on most action figure clothing:
Gluing several of these to the inside of the plate & sewing them onto the straps would provide both a far more secure connection and be truer to the actual helmet, which is constructed in a similar manner.
Moving on, ordinarily I'd take off his jersey but it is unfortunately incredibly tight and difficult to remove, so this photo (taken before I received said jersey) will have to suffice:
I'm still altogether quite pleased with him, despite the various problems encountered. Hopefully I will locate a more accurately colored jersey and add the necessary markings, so watch this page!