68H vs 65C
Optical Laboratory Specialist (USA) vs Dietitian (USA)
Two Army MOS codes that both got the "Army Strong" pitch and received very different interpretations of what that means every morning.
The honest version of the 68H brochure would include this line: the work is real opticianry — surfacing, edging, mounting, inspection — but the volume is relentless and the lab is usually two-deep on a good day and one-deep on a bad one. The honest 65C brochure would feature: commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. Neither of these were in the actual brochure. The actual brochure had a stock photo of someone looking purposeful. Same military, same mission statement, two completely different interpretations of what that mission feels like at 0600.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“You will fabricate prescription eyewear and protective-mask inserts for the force — every Soldier who needs glasses gets them because of 68H. You will earn ABO and NCLE civilian opticianry credentials that translate directly into a $40-60K+ civilian opticianry career with no further schooling required, and you will work normal hours in a clinical setting away from the line. Optical labs do not deploy as combat slots, the work is technical and rewarding, and the post-service crosswalk into LensCrafters management, private optometry practices, or a VA civilian optical lab is one of the most direct in the Army.”
You will spend most of your career standing in front of a surfacing generator and an edger in a windowless lab on the back side of the MTF, cutting plastic and polycarbonate lenses to a Rx written by an optometrist you have never met, for a Soldier who will pick up his glasses at the dispensing window and never know your name. The work is real opticianry — surfacing, edging, mounting, inspection — but the volume is relentless and the lab is usually two-deep on a good day and one-deep on a bad one. The civilian credential path is genuine: ABO (American Board of Opticianry) and NCLE (National Contact Lens Examiners) are real credentials that civilian opticians pay out of pocket for, and you can sit both inside your contract if the lab NCOIC supports it. The honest read: this is a small, niche MOS (a few hundred Active Duty 68H force-wide) with low deployment tempo, capped promotion timelines because the structure is small, and a post-service market that is real but narrow — opticianry in the civilian world tops out lower than nursing or radiologic tech. Pick this MOS if you want a clean clinical bench job with a usable credential, not if you wanted to be Doc.
“You will be the Army's expert on fueling the force — the officer who ensures soldiers eat right, perform at their peak, and recover from injury or illness through evidence-based nutrition. You'll run clinical nutrition programs at military treatment facilities, counsel patients on therapeutic diets, advise commanders on unit feeding and operational rations, and manage nutrition services in the field. Your RD credential carries real clinical weight, and the Army gives you the rank and authority to act on it across a wide patient population.”
Army dietitians live in two worlds: the MTF clinic and the field, and neither one is quite what you pictured in your RD training. In the clinic, you're managing therapeutic nutrition for a patient panel that includes everything from eating disorder cases to post-surgical recovery to soldiers with diabetes who can't stop eating at the DFAC. Commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. Deployed, you're advising on ration planning, water quality, and preventing the GI illness that will sideline more troops than the enemy. Your RD credential is required to commission, so you're already credentialed before you arrive. The challenge is practicing evidence-based nutrition inside an institution that has strong opinions about what soldiers should eat and not always great infrastructure to deliver it.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 68H on the left, 65C on the right.
You work a clinical-lab schedule at an MTF optical lab — typically 0730 to 1630 Monday through Friday. The day is moving Rx orders through the bench: surfacing single-vision and progressive lenses on a generator and polisher, edging to the frame, mounting, lensometer-verifying power and axis, inspecting for tolerance, and pushing finished orders to the dispensing window for the optometry clinic to hand off. You also fabricate protective-mask optical inserts (for the M50 and aircrew masks) and prescription inserts for deploying units, and you handle ANSI-Z80 inspection tolerances, frame fitting questions from the dispenser, and the SRTS / Defense Online Optical Lab order queue.
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Optical Laboratory Specialist Course at the Medical Education and Training Campus (METC), JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, TX — roughly 14 weeks. METC is a joint medical schoolhouse; you train alongside Navy and Air Force optical fabrication candidates. The course covers ophthalmic optics, lens surfacing, edging, mounting, lensometry, ANSI tolerance inspection, protective-mask insert fabrication, and basic frame fitting. You graduate with the technical chops to sit the American Board of Opticianry (ABO) certified-optician exam.
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Low. Bench work — standing or sitting at surfacing generators, lens edgers, lensometers, and inspection stations for a full shift. Standard Army PT requirements still apply; fine-motor and color-vision standards apply to the technical job.
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This is a real, useful, badly understood MOS. The recruiter will frame it as "you fabricate glasses for Soldiers" and stop there. What they will not tell you: this is one of the smallest enlisted MOS in the Army (a few hundred Active Duty 68H across the entire structure) which means promotion is slow because the slots ahead of you are slow to open; the bench work is the entire job, day after day, with limited variety once you have surfaced your thousandth pair of single-vision polycarbs; and the deployment piece is minimal, so the combat-medic / clinic-medic "Doc" identity does not exist for 68H. What they also will not tell you: the civilian crosswalk is genuinely solid for a clinical-lab job that requires no four-year degree. ABO and NCLE are real, recognized credentials. LensCrafters, EyeMart Express, the VA optical fabrication center in Hampton VA, private optometry practices, and state-licensed dispensing roles in NY / NJ / CT / FL / RI all hire post-service opticians and pay a livable wage that scales with experience and license stack. Pick 68H if you want a clean clinical bench job with an exit credential. Skip it if you wanted to be Doc, wanted to deploy, or wanted to be promoted on a normal medical-MOS timeline.
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