BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan - In the early hours of the day, the aircraft parking ramp at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, was alive with activity. Checklists were run, hatches checked, bombs loaded and missions briefed, as the crew chiefs, support units, and flyers of F-15E Strike Eagle No. 89-0487 achieved a milestone 10,000 flying hours Jan. 13.
F-15E Strike Eagle No. 89-0487, or "No. 487" for short, was commissioned Nov. 13, 1990. It's the first F-15 of any type to reach 10,000 hours, despite being younger than many F-15A and F-15C models. During its service, the aircraft participated in operations Desert Storm, Deliberate Guard, Northern Watch, Southern Watch, Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom.
The accomplishment of flying more than 10,000 hours was shared by the entire 455th Expeditionary Aircraft Maintenance Squadron. The 455th EAMXS includes the 335th Expeditionary Aircraft Maintenance Unit and supporting units.
"It has taken more than 21 years of qualified maintenance technicians performing more than one million hours of inspections and repairs in all types of environments at home station, depot facilities, TDY and AEF locations to ensure aircraft No. 89-0487 was available to deploy on numerous TDYs and AEFs," Chief Master Sgt. John Parrott, 335th EAMU superintendent said. "It also took careful, timely loading and maintenance by hundreds of weapons technicians in conjunction with countless hours of repairs and inspections performed by avionics, electrical and environmental, engine, fuels, egress and structural airmen."
The current crew chiefs for No. 487 are all deployed from Seymour-Johnson Air Force Base, N.C. They agreed that good maintenance and support were critical.
Senior Airman Eric Rock, 455th EAMS crew chief assigned to No. 487, said, "This is the squadron flagship. This accomplishment definitely shows the caliber of those before us and those who are crewing it now. They are putting the best and most motivated on the team."
The No. 487 crew chiefs have been working with the same aircraft for the past year. Since arriving at Bagram, the high demand for the flagship helped highlight the team cohesion needed to keep the aircraft mission ready.
"When we got here, it was at 8,800 hours," Staff Sgt. Ryan Forsse, 455th EAMS crew chief assigned to No. 487, said. "We put 1,200 hours on it in the past three months. During that time, this aircraft dropped 15 percent of all bombs deployed in our fleet. To keep it flying at that pace, it was very important to keep the same crew on it to get to know the aircraft."
Rock said each plane has a specific personality.
"Keeping the same crew working on it allows for the technician to see trends," Rock said. "You get to know what is going on with it, what sounds normal and what works."
The crew chiefs specifically acknowledged that all of the support units were integral in reaching the 10,000 flying hours milestone.
"When we have a problem that needs to be fixed by another shop, they come out quickly for this jet," Forsse said. "This is the squadron flagship, so all the shops push to get this aircraft fixed, armed up and back in the air. Any time we need something, they are on it."
Lt. Col. David Moeller, 335th Expeditionary Flying Squadron commander, is the current weapons systems officer for No. 487. Moeller fully appreciated the impact of the work done by the F-15E No. 487 team.
"It's not just about the hours in the sky," Moeller said. "The maintenance ability to keep this jet flying so it may support the current fight is amazing. This is 24-hour, all-weather, ops throughout the OEF battlespace. Maintenance, weapons and all support by the 455th makes this possible. It was a total team effort."
In addition to the ground support, a lot of work was done in the air for No. 487.
"This milestone also required skilled, proficient pilots and weapons systems officers flying more than 3,500 sorties," Parrott said. "Like the crew that dropped a GBU-10 on an Iraqi Mi24 helicopter during Operation Desert Storm."
F-15E No. 487 is the only one of its kind to record an air-to-air kill.
As a personal tribute to history, Moeller chose to pass the honor of flying over 10,000 hours to Capt. Ryan Bodenheimer, 335th F-15E EFS pilot, and Capt. Erin Short, 335th EFS weapons systems officer. Both are deployed from Seymour-Johnson AFB.
"It just seemed appropriate that the longest flying F-15E be flown by the youngest flyers in the unit," he said.
Parrott summed up the significance of No. 487's sustained mission capability.
"It has taken 21 years of two things: pride and passion," he said. "Pride in the work completed with fellow airmen, ultimately for the excellence of the Air Force. And passion - regardless of the weather, obstacle or task faced, successful completion is the only goal."
Date Taken: | 01.13.2012 |
Date Posted: | 01.15.2012 00:15 |
Story ID: | 82430 |
Location: | BAGRAM AIR FIELD, AF |
Web Views: | 628 |
Downloads: | 0 |
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