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1. OC-ALC: Taking the Materiel Enterprise to the Fight Maj Gen Loren Reno
Commander, OC-ALC
3. Recover Forward Deployed Aircraft
Dispose of Aircraft
Deploy Engineers & Civilians
Adjust to Changing Warfighter Requirements
Overview
4. 4 1. 15 Sep 05 (85-0066) Anderson AFB, Guam: Fire & in-flight emergency(IFE) result from broken
hydraulic line spraying fluid on brakes
*Damage to right main landing gear, R engine nacelle, R wing & parts of fuselage, structure & skin
*Shipped wing & nacelle to Guam for repair on 22 Oct 07
*Deployed depot repair team members:
*OC-ALC (28): 76 MXW (15), 427 ACSG & B-1 SPO (4), 654th CLSS (5), 10th Flight Test (4)
*Ellsworth (12)
*45,200 man-hours
*Total cost: $10.3M
26 Aug 07 (86-0133) Kandahar AB, Afghanistan: Fire & IFE result from broken power take off shaft
coupling which allowed flailing shaft to sever fuel feed lines in R engine bay
*Severe damage to engine bay & other parts; couplings needed to be secured
*Engine removed & AC repaired/configured for 3 engine flight on 2 Oct 07 by SPD/CLSS team
*AC recovered by 10th Flight Test to RAF Fairford
*Deployed depot repair team members:
*OC-ALC (14 ): 10th Flight Test (4), 654th CLSS (9), B-1 SPO (1)
11 Jun 08 (86-0134) Al Udeid, Qatar: AC experienced #1 & #2 bleed air indicator light
illuminations while in flight
*Next 2 weeks, extensive troubleshooting & repair actions taken…AC continued experiencing
problems/write-ups
*379 EMXG/CC directs AC impounded…Tiger Teams attempt to troubleshoot
*24 Jun 08, 379 EMXG/CC forwards ETAR for DFT
*1 Jul 08, OC-ALC deploys DFT technicians to assist with installing & operationally checking left
bleed air pre-cooler, wiring harnesses & bleed air leak detection loop
*3 sorties flown with no bleed air problems
*5-7 Jul 08, DFT assists with additional repairs (same problem)
*8 Jul 08, DFT released to return to Tinker
*Deployed depot repair team members:
*OC-ALC (3): 76 MXG (2) & B-1 SPO (1)
1. 15 Sep 05 (85-0066) Anderson AFB, Guam: Fire & in-flight emergency(IFE) result from broken
hydraulic line spraying fluid on brakes
*Damage to right main landing gear, R engine nacelle, R wing & parts of fuselage, structure & skin
*Shipped wing & nacelle to Guam for repair on 22 Oct 07
*Deployed depot repair team members:
*OC-ALC (28): 76 MXW (15), 427 ACSG & B-1 SPO (4), 654th CLSS (5), 10th Flight Test (4)
*Ellsworth (12)
*45,200 man-hours
*Total cost: $10.3M
26 Aug 07 (86-0133) Kandahar AB, Afghanistan: Fire & IFE result from broken power take off shaft
coupling which allowed flailing shaft to sever fuel feed lines in R engine bay
*Severe damage to engine bay & other parts; couplings needed to be secured
*Engine removed & AC repaired/configured for 3 engine flight on 2 Oct 07 by SPD/CLSS team
*AC recovered by 10th Flight Test to RAF Fairford
*Deployed depot repair team members:
*OC-ALC (14 ): 10th Flight Test (4), 654th CLSS (9), B-1 SPO (1)
11 Jun 08 (86-0134) Al Udeid, Qatar: AC experienced #1 & #2 bleed air indicator light
illuminations while in flight
*Next 2 weeks, extensive troubleshooting & repair actions taken…AC continued experiencing
problems/write-ups
*379 EMXG/CC directs AC impounded…Tiger Teams attempt to troubleshoot
*24 Jun 08, 379 EMXG/CC forwards ETAR for DFT
*1 Jul 08, OC-ALC deploys DFT technicians to assist with installing & operationally checking left
bleed air pre-cooler, wiring harnesses & bleed air leak detection loop
*3 sorties flown with no bleed air problems
*5-7 Jul 08, DFT assists with additional repairs (same problem)
*8 Jul 08, DFT released to return to Tinker
*Deployed depot repair team members:
*OC-ALC (3): 76 MXG (2) & B-1 SPO (1)
5. Dispose of Aircraft 5 Dissected & placed in 34 ISO containers
Removed 10 LRUs from engines & landing gear for training
97 LRUs shipped to OC-ALC for potential lab use
Aft Decks shipped to OC-ALC for future maintenance efforts *22 Feb 08, crashed shortly after take-off from Anderson AFB, Guam
*Tinker’s B-2 engineers flew to Guam & directed 509th personnel how & where to cut up the AC
*Dissected into manageable pieces & placed in 34 ISO containers; Containers sealed & sent to Port of Tacoma, WA on 29 Jul 08 (materials inspected & under guard)
*Contents unloaded & reduced in size with giant sheer
*Removed 10 LRUs from engines & landing gear for training purposes; Shipped to 509th BW
*97 LRUs shipped to WSSC for possible lab use
*4 tested & serviceable
*27 not yet tested
*20 with possible serviceable components
*46 completely destroyed
*Unusable LRUs/components will be destroyed using hammer mill process
*Aft Decks were shipped to Tinker on 29 Sep 08 for future use in maintenance efforts such as welding techniques
*Some Aft Deck components, left and right inboard & outboard trailing edge spars, have been sent to AFRL for analysis for future design efforts
*Contents moved to hammer mill for processing
*Metal pieces reduced to 2”x 2”; Composite material, including core, reduced to 0.25”x0.25”
*B-2 SSM personnel provided all funding & documentation for entire effort
*Recovered metals sold as scrap & used to offset costs of effort
*Remaining processed material taken to local landfill & buried
*22 Feb 08, crashed shortly after take-off from Anderson AFB, Guam
*Tinker’s B-2 engineers flew to Guam & directed 509th personnel how & where to cut up the AC
*Dissected into manageable pieces & placed in 34 ISO containers; Containers sealed & sent to Port of Tacoma, WA on 29 Jul 08 (materials inspected & under guard)
*Contents unloaded & reduced in size with giant sheer
*Removed 10 LRUs from engines & landing gear for training purposes; Shipped to 509th BW
*97 LRUs shipped to WSSC for possible lab use
*4 tested & serviceable
*27 not yet tested
*20 with possible serviceable components
*46 completely destroyed
*Unusable LRUs/components will be destroyed using hammer mill process
*Aft Decks were shipped to Tinker on 29 Sep 08 for future use in maintenance efforts such as welding techniques
*Some Aft Deck components, left and right inboard & outboard trailing edge spars, have been sent to AFRL for analysis for future design efforts
*Contents moved to hammer mill for processing
*Metal pieces reduced to 2”x 2”; Composite material, including core, reduced to 0.25”x0.25”
*B-2 SSM personnel provided all funding & documentation for entire effort
*Recovered metals sold as scrap & used to offset costs of effort
*Remaining processed material taken to local landfill & buried
6. Deploy Engineers & Civilians
6 OC-ALC/EN: Mr. Russ Howard (5 May 08 – 13 Sep 08)
Current Assignment: SES & Director of Engineering for OC-ALC
- Commander, Operations Flight, Sole Expeditionary Civil Engineering Squadron Kirkuk Regional AB, Iraq
Led 88 person Operations Flight -- $3M effort to support 500 buildings; FOB Warrior with 200 WO &
3000 service calls
- Directed improvements to 20 guard towers, bolstered 6 gates & placed 500+ FP barriers
- Compelled O&M Contractor to corrective actions; Resolved FP issue & installed 500 yard drainage
canal/eliminating SF viz-blocking vegetation/preventing health issues
72 ABW/CEPR: Mr. Frank Richard Walker (4 tours of duty)
Current Assignment: Environmental Restoration Project Manager in Civil Engineering
Tours of Iraq possible through Interagency Agreements with the US Army Corp of Engineers, Gulf
Region Central District, Camp Victory, Iraq
-- (Jun 05 – Nov 05) Worked with Construction Services, Gulf Region Central
--- Responsible for Independent Government Estimates (IGEs), Bill of Quantities and SOWs for projects
within Al Anbar & Baghdad Provence
--- Served as PM for the MilCon program including solicitation & award of OH Protection project
-- (Apr – Sept 06, Feb – Jul 07, & Jan - Jul 08) Assigned to Gulf Region Central, Camp Liberty, Iraq
--- Served as PM for Security and Justice Projects within Al Anbar & Baghdad Provence
--- Work included development of SOW, IGE, preliminary design, initial reports & contractor selection
processes for security & justice projects within two provinces in Iraq
76 MXW/QPE: Mr. Stephen Weber (May 07 - Apr 08)
Current Assignment: Environmental Engineer, Unit Environmental Coordinator for CMXG
- Worked for Baghdad Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT)
- Served as Coordinator and Program Officer of the Quick Reaction Fund & served as technical/project
advisor for Coalition & Government of Iraq infrastructure projects in education, health, transportation,
potable water, solid waste/landfills & sanitary sewers
Awarded the Meritorious Civilian Service Award & the GWOT medal for deployment accomplishments
Total Tinker Deployments (Jan 06 to 30 Sep 08) = 8314
ACC/Other Agencies = 7153 and AFMC = 1161
OC-ALC/EN: Mr. Russ Howard (5 May 08 – 13 Sep 08)
Current Assignment: SES & Director of Engineering for OC-ALC
- Commander, Operations Flight, Sole Expeditionary Civil Engineering Squadron Kirkuk Regional AB, Iraq
Led 88 person Operations Flight -- $3M effort to support 500 buildings; FOB Warrior with 200 WO &
3000 service calls
- Directed improvements to 20 guard towers, bolstered 6 gates & placed 500+ FP barriers
- Compelled O&M Contractor to corrective actions; Resolved FP issue & installed 500 yard drainage
canal/eliminating SF viz-blocking vegetation/preventing health issues
72 ABW/CEPR: Mr. Frank Richard Walker (4 tours of duty)
Current Assignment: Environmental Restoration Project Manager in Civil Engineering
Tours of Iraq possible through Interagency Agreements with the US Army Corp of Engineers, Gulf
Region Central District, Camp Victory, Iraq
-- (Jun 05 – Nov 05) Worked with Construction Services, Gulf Region Central
--- Responsible for Independent Government Estimates (IGEs), Bill of Quantities and SOWs for projects
within Al Anbar & Baghdad Provence
--- Served as PM for the MilCon program including solicitation & award of OH Protection project
-- (Apr – Sept 06, Feb – Jul 07, & Jan - Jul 08) Assigned to Gulf Region Central, Camp Liberty, Iraq
--- Served as PM for Security and Justice Projects within Al Anbar & Baghdad Provence
--- Work included development of SOW, IGE, preliminary design, initial reports & contractor selection
processes for security & justice projects within two provinces in Iraq
76 MXW/QPE: Mr. Stephen Weber (May 07 - Apr 08)
Current Assignment: Environmental Engineer, Unit Environmental Coordinator for CMXG
- Worked for Baghdad Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT)
- Served as Coordinator and Program Officer of the Quick Reaction Fund & served as technical/project
advisor for Coalition & Government of Iraq infrastructure projects in education, health, transportation,
potable water, solid waste/landfills & sanitary sewers
Awarded the Meritorious Civilian Service Award & the GWOT medal for deployment accomplishments
Total Tinker Deployments (Jan 06 to 30 Sep 08) = 8314
ACC/Other Agencies = 7153 and AFMC = 1161
7. F108 Over-Temp Analysis Adjust to Changing Warfighter Requirements 7 F-108 Over Temp: Engine failure in AOR spiked in summer months
*Primary removal cause due to failure mode where high pressure turbine shrouds contact blade tips increasing Exhaust Gas Temperature (EGT)
*Shroud Droop is known failure mode associated with older HW configuration having less robust cooling air flow & materials allowing HPT shrouds to rub into blade tips resulting in high EGT
Short-Term Solutions:
*Now: Provide 24/7 technical support & monitor EGT trending data for engines preparing to deploy
*As ops allow: Use static take-off procedures allowing engines to stabilize
*Recommendation: Consider water-washing engine prior to deployment to max engine performance before exposure to AOR environment
Long-Term Solution:
*Now, after UER: HW upgrades to eliminate failure mode via improved materials for shroud supports/hangers & improved cooling flow
*Of the 893 engines built to older configuration, 200 have been upgraded
F-108 Over Temp: Engine failure in AOR spiked in summer months
*Primary removal cause due to failure mode where high pressure turbine shrouds contact blade tips increasing Exhaust Gas Temperature (EGT)
*Shroud Droop is known failure mode associated with older HW configuration having less robust cooling air flow & materials allowing HPT shrouds to rub into blade tips resulting in high EGT
Short-Term Solutions:
*Now: Provide 24/7 technical support & monitor EGT trending data for engines preparing to deploy
*As ops allow: Use static take-off procedures allowing engines to stabilize
*Recommendation: Consider water-washing engine prior to deployment to max engine performance before exposure to AOR environment
Long-Term Solution:
*Now, after UER: HW upgrades to eliminate failure mode via improved materials for shroud supports/hangers & improved cooling flow
*Of the 893 engines built to older configuration, 200 have been upgraded
8. Urgent operational need (UON) – keeping pilot’s view “forward-focused”
557 ACSS issued T1 modification
Full-spectrum awareness and “forward-focus”
In use now in AOR
Fleet-wide implementation?
8 E-3 T1 Mod (Temp): Recent visit to AOR, Lt Gen North observed pilot was turning around to look at the navigation console for flight info
*Urgent operational need (UON) issued requesting capability to keep pilots view “forward-focused”
*557 ACSS issued T1 (Temporary) modification
*Developed specialized LCD external monitor connecting VGA port of
the Nav laptop & attaching to AC frame under sliding window
*Provides pilot with moving map for position monitoring, threat
plotting, take-off & landing data software, approach & departure
instrument procedures & weather
*System currently deployed to CENTAF AOR supporting deployed
contingency ops
*Capability now being evaluated for potential implementation fleet-wide
E-3 T1 Mod (Temp): Recent visit to AOR, Lt Gen North observed pilot was turning around to look at the navigation console for flight info
*Urgent operational need (UON) issued requesting capability to keep pilots view “forward-focused”
*557 ACSS issued T1 (Temporary) modification
*Developed specialized LCD external monitor connecting VGA port of
the Nav laptop & attaching to AC frame under sliding window
*Provides pilot with moving map for position monitoring, threat
plotting, take-off & landing data software, approach & departure
instrument procedures & weather
*System currently deployed to CENTAF AOR supporting deployed
contingency ops
*Capability now being evaluated for potential implementation fleet-wide
9. KC-135 Technical Support
24/7 Engineering Technical Assistance Request Message Support Center
Manas AB, Deployment Support 9 1. KC-135 AOR Engineering Support
*ETAR support provided 24/7 with Message Support Center (nights, weekends & holidays)
*66 Off-hour ETARs supported between Jun 07 - Sep 08
*26 June 08, Developed engineering design data to locally manufacture hydraulic tube (.75 hrs)
*16 Aug 08, Developed procedures to locally manufacture flap track bushing from alt material (3 hrs)
2. KC-135 Deployment Support for Mishap
*AC (63-8886) wing clipped by TU-154 creating fire at Manas AB, Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia
*Technical Team deployed to provide on-site expertise in assessment, repair & disposal costs
*Recommendation: Disposal
*Dec 06, Team Deployed to Manas AB to recover aircraft
*Team included 550/552 ACSS & 654 CLSS (27 Total Team Members)
*Team cut-up AC, packaged pieces for shipment & returned AC to US in record time – 44 days vs 90 days
*Team shipped over 1000 save list parts worth approximately $11.0M
*AC specimen will be used in upcoming Teardown Study
1. KC-135 AOR Engineering Support
*ETAR support provided 24/7 with Message Support Center (nights, weekends & holidays)
*66 Off-hour ETARs supported between Jun 07 - Sep 08
*26 June 08, Developed engineering design data to locally manufacture hydraulic tube (.75 hrs)
*16 Aug 08, Developed procedures to locally manufacture flap track bushing from alt material (3 hrs)
2. KC-135 Deployment Support for Mishap
*AC (63-8886) wing clipped by TU-154 creating fire at Manas AB, Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia
*Technical Team deployed to provide on-site expertise in assessment, repair & disposal costs
*Recommendation: Disposal
*Dec 06, Team Deployed to Manas AB to recover aircraft
*Team included 550/552 ACSS & 654 CLSS (27 Total Team Members)
*Team cut-up AC, packaged pieces for shipment & returned AC to US in record time – 44 days vs 90 days
*Team shipped over 1000 save list parts worth approximately $11.0M
*AC specimen will be used in upcoming Teardown Study
10. 10 Adjust to Changing Warfighter Requirements