In a nod to aviation history, 20 Airmen assigned to 911th Maintenance Squadron painted World War II invasions stripes on a C-17 Globemaster III aircraft assigned to the 911th Airlift Wing at Pittsburgh International Airport Air Reserve Station from June 5-14,2023. The project was inspired by the 79th anniversary of the D-Day landings, the day the Allies invaded Western Europe in World War II.
The black and white stripes, originally used to distinguish Allied aircraft from enemy planes at Normandy, serve as a visual tribute to the heroic efforts of the past while representing the continued dedication of the 911th AW to “Defend, Mobilize and Fight.”
The decision to add the invasion stripes was made by the leadership of the 911th AW, who see it as an opportunity to honor the sacrifices and bravery of those who fought in World War II.
Col. Bryan Bailey, commander of the 911th AW said, “Heritage is important. We stand on the shoulders of Airpower giants who came before us, and it is OK to remind the world – and ourselves– just how awesome the U.S. Air Force is.”
Bailey went on to say the daily skill of Airmen may lead some to take for granted the overall difficulty of achieving air dominance, but invasion stripes may serve as a reminder.
“We’re the ones who figured out how to fly bombers off carriers, how to tow gliders full of Soldiers to the beaches of Normandy. We are the reason no Soldier, Sailor, Airmen, Marine or Guardian has come under direct attack from the air for three-quarters of a century,” said Bailey. “I’m proud of that. Having this aircraft around – even temporarily – reminds everyone of not only our heritage but also our capability.”
The aircraft will keep its stripes for a 365-day period with their removal landing on the 80th anniversary of D-Day as per the Heritage Aircraft Programs regulations.
While the decision to display the regalia of the past was a command level decision, the design and its execution fell onto the Steel Airmen of the aircraft structural maintenance shop, a process which began long before a hand even touched a paint brush.
“It’s been months,” said Senior Master Sgt. John Revell, fabrication flight chief assigned to the 911th MXS. “I'd say February is when we started getting an idea together. Looking at the plane, how to do it, where and what we needed. But once that approval came through, the team was
right on it. It actually worked out well because we had people scheduled for annual tour… the stars just aligned.”
A handful of those Airmen were Tech. Sgt Joseph Cider, Tech. Sgt. Jim Krobot, Staff Sgt. Natalie Rupp, and Staff Sgt. Leah Weingartner, all aircraft structural technicians assigned to the 911th MXS.
“Well, I think we didn’t really know what to expect going into it,” said Rupp. “I think we all had to use each other’s ideas to form a plan of what we were going to do. Who’s going to work under the wing? Above the wing? How are we going to lay this out? How are we going to get straight lines?”
The biggest challenge with being the first people to do something new, it seems, is having no instructions, technical orders, or experiences to fall back on.
“Yeah, there was no recipe for anything, and I think that was the hardest part.” said Weingartner. “But once that was done it was like, ‘Okay, we just roll it on now.’”
Weingartner said her excitement to be a part of history drowned out any anxiety and although the work wasn’t easy, it went on with little to no snags or spills.
“Honestly, I expected there to be more obstacles,” said Weingartner. “We just had so much momentum going into it that everything was effortless. Yeah, we’re professionals.”
And that seemed to be the key – professionalism coupled with communication and teamwork. These qualities were seemingly primed in this group of 20 maintainers who work together for just one weekend a month.
“The most important part of the process was our teamwork and being on the same page,” said Rupp. “That was like, the number one factor that made everything run smoothly. I think our shop is lucky that we work so well together because we were able to bounce ideas back and forth off
each other.”
Airmen would meet multiple times during the day to communicate issues coming up and try to figure out the best way to stay ahead of them, seeking a proactive approach to looming trouble. With a project of this scope, even a half-of-an-inch mismeasured at the start can become a considerable deviation 13 feet down the line. At the end of the day, it came down to a mix of artistic eyeballing, precision measurements and identifying basic shapes.
“Surface prep is the most important step,” said Rupp. “That’s what they told us in tech school.”
When it finally came time to paint, Steel Airmen broke into teams and used screen ink thinned with acetone to slather on the stripes. Teams stuck to their areas of responsibility such as above the wing, under the wing and sections of the fuselage. Others ran ink and tools, such as rollers,
as supplies ran low or disintegrated.
“That’s one thing we weren’t expecting,” said Krobot. “Acetone eats foam rollers. Which is what we normally use for touch-ups, but for a job this big… getting the right rollers was pivotal.”
The painting process took 88 hours of labor and 15 total gallons of white, black and blue ink, 12 gallons of acetone, and 22 rolls of tape to complete.
“They had some type of artistic freedom, but an artistic freedom with the result being perfection,” said Revell. “They rose to the challenge for sure, but they enjoyed the process in my eyes. So that was definitely a sight to see. Rarely do you see people with that much laser focus. That’s
not something that comes around all the time.”
Although being first may have been all the motivation the crew needed to get the job done, Weingartner said it was more than that. It circles back to those who came before.
“It is cool that we were the first C-17 to do this," Weingartner said. "Every brush stroke felt significant knowing we were adding to a piece of history. But we wanted to do it and to get it right to honor that day and the legacy of those who fought for freedom and democracy.”
The 911th AW commander emphasized the ability of America's non-commissioned officer corps and their ability to rise to any challenge.
“A ‘just do it, figure it out’ project like this one signifies why America wins in any fight,” said Bailey. “Because we trust our NCOs to lead and empower them to do amazing things. This whole project was a mission type order. ‘Paint the plane’ really meant get the approval, do the measurements, assemble a team, get the tools…then paint the plane. Multiple capable Airmen is not a new concept – getting the job done, any job, is just in our DNA. I’m proud of the Steel Airmen that figured out how to succeed with this project and thank each of them.”
The 911th Airlift Wing extends its appreciation to the following maintainers for their work and excellence:
Senior Master Sgt. John Revell
Master Sgt. David Clark
Master Sgt. Kevin Galdamez
Master Sgt. Casey Lavis
Master Sgt. Ashley Wiley
Tech. Sgt. Joseph Cider
Tech. Sgt. Adam Kitta
Tech. Sgt. James Krobot
Tech. Sgt. Michael Macaluso
Tech. Sgt. Michelle Rozich
Tech. Sgt. Joseph Ulanch
Staff Sgt. Natalie Rupp
Staff Sgt. Leah Weingartner
Staff Sgt. Tyler Williams
Senior Airman Tyler Headland
Senior Airman TyJuan Jones
Senior Airman Allassane Ouattara
Senior Airman Kyle Wassum
Senior Airman Alex Yurechko
Airman 1st Class Lincoln Heard
Date Taken: | 06.22.2023 |
Date Posted: | 06.22.2023 15:09 |
Story ID: | 447730 |
Location: | PITTSBURGH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT AIR RESERVE STATION, PENNSYLVANIA, US |
Hometown: | PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA, US |
Web Views: | 4,608 |
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