7565 vs 6423
Pilot, MV-22 Osprey (USMC) vs Aviation Electronic Micro/Miniature Component and Cable Repair Technician (USMC)
Both went to Parris Island or San Diego. Everything since has been a choose-your-own-adventure book with no good options.
On one end of the military experience spectrum, 7565: the mission set is broad: you'll insert Marines into hot LZs, fly long-range special operations support, and conduct humanitarian relief. On the opposite end, 6423: your job is to take a failed circuit card or avionics component, figure out exactly which piece-part died, source or fabricate a replacement, and return it to service — and you do this with technical manuals, automated test equipment, and a level of patience that only comes from truly understanding how avionics systems actually work at the component level. The spectrum is wider than the career counselor implied. The spectrum is always wider than the career counselor implied. Two jobs united only by a shared conviction that the other one somehow has it easier.
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'll fly the MV-22 Osprey — the only tiltrotor aircraft in military service. It takes off like a helicopter, flies like a plane, and does things no other aircraft can do. Osprey pilots fly assault support, long-range raids, special operations inserts, and humanitarian missions in environments that fixed-wing can't reach and helicopters can't get to fast enough.”
The Osprey is a unique aircraft and the flying is genuinely challenging — transitioning between helicopter and airplane mode requires a skill set that doesn't exist anywhere else in aviation. The mission set is broad: you'll insert Marines into hot LZs, fly long-range special operations support, and conduct humanitarian relief. The fleet is the backbone of Marine assault support. The deployment tempo is high and the maintenance requirements of the V-22 are well-known in the community. Civilian tiltrotor experience is niche but the rotary-wing hours and multi-engine qualification open doors to helicopter EMS, offshore oil, and airline pathways.
“You'll become one of the Marine Corps' most technically skilled electronics specialists, performing microscopic soldering and repair work that keeps Marine aviation flying. The micro-miniature repair skills translate directly to civilian electronics manufacturing, aerospace, and medical device industries.”
You are a Marine Aviation Electronics IMA Technician, which means you work on the parts of aircraft electronics that the squadron-level mechanics have already given up on and sent back. Your job is to take a failed circuit card or avionics component, figure out exactly which piece-part died, source or fabricate a replacement, and return it to service — and you do this with technical manuals, automated test equipment, and a level of patience that only comes from truly understanding how avionics systems actually work at the component level. It is not glamorous. It is not on the flight line. It is in a shop, under good lighting, with ESD precautions, and it is some of the most valuable technical training the Marine Corps offers.
Recent Reviews
Community Takes
Be the first to share your take on 7565 vs 6423
Compare Other MOS
Search by code or title, or browse by branch