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309th Aerospace Maintenance And Regeneration Group

pat038536

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http://www.tinker.af.mil/news/story_print.asp?id=123436624

Gearing up for a 'Ghost' ride

by Kimberly Woodruff
Staff Writer

1/16/2015 - TINKER AIR FORCE BASE, Okla. -- With high demands on maturing aircraft, the Air Force is finding creative ways to save money on an aging fleet. With the chance of manufacturing a new B-52 out of the question -- because production ceased in the 1960s -- the Air Force is finding it more cost effective to regenerate it rather than repair it. Calling on the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group, or 309th AMARG, an aircraft that has been in storage for more than six years will soon be back in the fleet. The original B-52 fleet had 744 aircraft; however, due to compliance with the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty and Congressional mandates, the Air Force is left with just 76 in today's fleet. Last year, a mishap at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., left a B-52 severely damaged. Immediately following the incident, Tinker's B-52 System Program Office (SPO) teamed with Boeing to conduct engineering analysis, along with cost estimates. They proposed a course of action to Air Staff to retire the damaged jet and replace it with one from 309th AMARG, also known as the Air Force's "Boneyard," at Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz.

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While some personnel inspect the top of the left wing, others prepare to work in the No. 1 wheel well, as the aircraft sits in the Air Force’s “Boneyard” at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz. (Air Force photo by Teresa Pittman, AMARG)

According to Capt. Chuck McLeod, a logistics career broadening officer and the B-52 SPO's team lead for the regeneration effort, "Salvaging a retired B-52 from the 'Boneyard' saves taxpayers money." He continued, "It's far too expensive to repair the damaged aircraft or manufacture a new bomber, not to mention there hasn't even been a new B-52 since 1962."

Choosing an aircraft
AMARG has maintained B-52H serial number 61-0007 in 1000-type storage, meaning it has the highest parts cannibalization restrictions requiring Headquarters Air Force approval for each part being requested. It is the most preserved level of aircraft storage with thin layers of strippable paint covering portions of the aircraft to protect it from the environment.

"Tail Number 61-0007, a former Minot Tail known as 'Ghost Rider,' was chosen after thorough inspections. It was a careful decision based on extensive engineering analysis. This aircraft has been exceptionally well preserved and maintained by the 309th AMARG team, which made the B-52 SPO's and Air Force Global Strike Command's recommendation to Air Staff to regenerate this tail number the obvious choice," Captain McLeod said.

Brenden Shaw, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center Logistics Branch chief, said, "61-0007 has fewer hours and is in excellent condition. In fact, according to one of the maintainers working at AMARG, this plane is in better shape than some of the ones currently in the fleet."

"This [re-commissioning of a B-52] has never been done in Air Force history," said retired Chief Master Sgt. Timothy Finch, a long time member of the B-52 community, who now works at Global Strike Command. "Everyone on the team is very excited."

Col. Keith Schultz, commander of the 307th Operations Group, 307th Bomb Wing at Barksdale AFB, will pilot the historic flight from the "Boneyard" to Barksdale. Colonel Schultz has flown the B-52 since 1980 and has a multitude of experiences in the Stratofortress. "I am the last of the Tall-Tail pilots (the old D model) who is still currently flying," he said, adding that, with more than 7,000 hours, he often volunteers for these challenging flights. "After delivering 18 B-52D and G models to the "Boneyard" over the years, it is about time I get to take one out."

Lt. Col. Darrel Hines, from Tinker's 10th Flight Test Squadron, will co-pilot and Capt. Carl Johnson, 2nd Operations Group, Barksdale, will serve as the navigator alongside Colonel Schultz.

Team effort
"This really is a cross-organizational team effort to get the plane operable," Captain McLeod said. "Air Force Global Strike Command, Defense Logistics Agency, 309th AMARG, 76th Aircraft Maintenance Group, AFGSC's 2nd and 5th Bomb Wings and AFRC's 307th Bomb Wing, are all working together to ensure the success of the mission."

Mr. Shaw credits Robin Benefield, a Logistics Management specialist at Tinker, with all of the initial coordination between Air Staff, Air Force Materiel Command, AFGSC, 309th AMARG and Tinker prior to the regeneration effort being approved to ensure the team was poised to begin work as soon as the word as given. "Ms. Benefield laid the groundwork for our success and will remain on the team until 61-0007 rejoins the fleet," Mr. Shaw said.

Senior Master Sgt. Gavin Smith, 307th Bomb Wing, AFRC, is leading regeneration efforts at the "Boneyard," in coordination with the B-52 System Program Office at Tinker and AFGSC.

SPO support includes engineering, technical orders, program management and a team of logistics professionals coordinating with their counterparts at Defense Logistics Agency to identify which parts are supportable and developing contingency plans for unsupportable items.

A diverse team is a tremendous value on a project this important. A shining example is when Karen Corley, a team member from the 76th AMXG, identified a Program Depot Maintenance (PDM) level task to remove and replace all fuel hoses, a safety of flight requirement only performed during PDM. While her input saved time and money for the regeneration effort, it more importantly prevented the potential of a catastrophic in-flight emergency. "Ms. Corley's involvement on the team is exceptionally critical to ensure we properly plan the work for 61-0007 arrival to the depot. Her efforts strengthen the team's relationship between AFLCMC and AFSC to ensure we deliver a reliable and viable weapon system back to the warfighter" said Mr. Shaw.

Melissa Alford, Logistics Management specialist in the B-52 SPO said, "prior to receiving Air Staff approval to go forward with the regen effort, the Logistics community took the initiative to look at all PDM Tasks that would need to be accomplished." She along with a team of logistics managers compiled a parts list for all PDM tasks and ran supportability assessments to determine if the Logistics Branch could support the requirements if the jet entered PDM today. Once those efforts were complete the lists were passed to engineering to verify all parts were accounted for so supportability could be determined, and forecast could be input. These efforts will ensure parts are available once the jet comes to PDM in 2015.

Flight worthy
"One of the biggest challenges is ensuring the aircraft is flight worthy for its flight to Barksdale," said Cody Boyd, lead engineer. "A lot has changed since 61-0007 last left PDM in 2004, so we had to be sure to catch everything to bring it up to configuration with the rest of the fleet." Mr. Shaw said, "Our team of engineers has looked at everything from a systems perspective and we're ahead of the game since we've integrated the entire community."

"The 309th AMARG is providing fantastic support to our team of maintainers working on 61-0007. While AMARG regenerates aircraft as a part of their day-to-day mission, their qualified personnel weren't current on a B-52H reactivation since there has never been a B-52 regenerated from AMARG," said Captain McLeod.

After the B-52 leaves the "Boneyard," it heads to Barksdale AFB where members from the 76th AMXG's Expeditionary Maintenance will salvage modifications from the damaged aircraft and install them on 61-0007 while Barksdale maintainers conduct routine inspections and repairs.

Tinker will accept the aircraft in late 2015 for a full PDM before it goes off into the blue to rejoin the active fleet in the summer of 2016. "We're working with AFGSC and 76th AMXG to determine which one-time through the fleet PDM tasks are supportable and required for 61-0007's first PDM since 2004," said Captain McLeod. He continued,
"Regardless of what those tasks are we will be prepared thanks to the tremendous planning and support of the entire regeneration team."

"She's an awesome aircraft with a very proud history of supporting Strategic Air Command's nuclear mission," Mr. Shaw said. "It's an absolute honor to be a small part of this historic achievement!"
-------------------------

There is another article located here: http://journalrecord.com/tinkertakeoff/2015/01/15/gearing-up-for-a-ghost-ride/
 
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Another Ahab

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Found this posted to my FB wall ' posts..

Commemorative Air Force B29 B24 Squadron (Non-Profit Organization)
Thank you for the post, pat038536. Sending a donation to the Squadron today:

- Uncle of my wife was a navigator in a B-24 during WWII.

- Flight was intercepted during his third mission (out of England), and his ship was shot out of the sky with all hands lost; none recovered (MIA). He was 21.

- Directly after family learned the news, the hair on his Mother's head turned rapidly ghost white and remained so the balance of her life (that was my wife's Grandmother).

This post here is a little memorial to him (and so many like him, in all wars). Jesse Coolidge ("J.C.") Maupin, of Cleveland TN. Requiescat in Pace.

Wanted to upload photo of J.C., and his ship, but I'll try that later (something preventing an upload right now).


 
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pat038536

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The AC-130J Ghostrider Will Get A Big Ass Gun After all

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It is no secret that the AC-130 fleet is changing. Once defined by their bristling cannons, the new breed of AC-130s are all about guided bombs and a slew of smart weapons, with just a single, direct fire 30mm cannon being fitted. Luckily, sharper minds have prevailed at AFSOC and now the AC-130Js will get the massive 105mm cannon they rightfully deserve.

Lt. General Bradley Heithold, the head of the AFSOC, swears by the AC-130's 105mm howitzer, told Breakingdefense.com that it's both more accurate and way less expensive than the precision guided munitions it was intended to replace. He credits the gun's precision to its lower explosive yield than even small guided bombs and missiles. The cost differential is also no secret – a 105mm howitzer shell costs hundreds of dollars, while a guided bomb can cost at a minimum tens of thousands of dollars or easily into the hundreds of thousands. Additionally, the AC-130's big shell can arrive on station in just a few seconds and re-attack rapidly, which is much faster than smart glide weapons or even missiles.

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General Heithold's plan is to slowly retire some of his middle-aged AC-130Us (the Vietnam era AC-130Hs are already on their way out) while awaiting the introduction of his newest gunships, with hopefully the third AC-130J receiving the 105mm cannon fresh from the factory. The first two AC-130Js will have to rely on a single bushmaster 30mm cannon, bombs and missiles until they can be upgraded with the new-old big gun. This will leave a fleet of about 26 AC-130s available at any given time going into the future.

Originally, the plan was to shrink the AC-130 fleet as the war in Afghanistan drew down and Iraq was supposedly in the review mirror. That didn't happen and considering a terror state controls a land mass reaching almost from the Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf, not to mention the mess that remains in Libya and the one that is growing in Yemen, there are few better weapons to take on these threats than the AC-130. In other words, demand may have dipped for the big bristling gunships, but now it is climbing again, with no end in sight.

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Here's to General Heithold for doing-up America's next AC-130 the right way and keeping with what is inexpensive and highly effective over what is technologically flashy. And here's to the upcoming AC-130J Ghostrider, an aircraft that is now looking more promising than ever, maturing into something more deadly, versatile and survivable, with directed energy weapons and advanced radar jamming capabilities on the horizon.

Although the AC-130J is still yet to take to the skies operationally, take a few minutes and fly along on a some training missions aboard AFSOC's "legacy" AC-130 Specter and Spooky flying gunships.

http://youtu.be/GZqiY5x0QZQ
http://youtu.be/Z4T0EczqhC8
http://youtu.be/U5OQSALhgbk
 

Another Ahab

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- Uncle of my wife was a navigator in a B-24 during WWII.

This post here is a little memorial to him (and so many like him, in all wars). Jesse Coolidge ("J.C.") Maupin, of Cleveland TN. Requiescat in Pace.
The logjam finally broke (uploads are working again):

- Small tribute to my wife's uncle and all his fellow crew.

- Lost-in-Action on Thanksgiving Day 1944.


View attachment %22J.C%22 Maupin (B-24).pdf
 

pat038536

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http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/story/28108170/b-52-comes-to-life-at-tucsons-boneyard

B-52 'comes to life' at Tucson's Boneyard

Image1.jpgImage2.jpg

TUCSON, AZ (Tucson News Now) - History was made in Tucson at the world famous "Boneyard." Perhaps you were lucky enough to see the B-52 Stratofortress fly over the Old Pueblo on Friday.

For the first time, the Air Force regenerated a B-52 from the Boneyard, which is technically called the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (309 AMARG). AMARG is a one-of-a-kind specialized facility within the Air Force Materiel Command structure.

The 309 AMARG provides critical aerospace maintenance and regeneration capabilities for Joint and Allied/Coalition war fighters in support of global operations and agile combat support for a wide range of military operations.

Once it took off, the crew flew it to Barksdale Air Force base in Louisiana, home to the oldest bomb wing in the Air Force. The B-52 made the flight with no problems. Maintenance crews at Barksdale will continue to install upgrade modifications to ensure configuration with the rest of the B-52 fleet.
 

Another Ahab

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Excellent photographs taken today of B-52H, Serial No. 61-0007 prior to its departure.

View attachment 542359
Not familiar with that nose configuration on a B-52:

- I'm recalling the snub nose as typical of B-52's

Guessing there's some avionic/radar upgrades in the H series. Anybody know?
B-52 'comes to life' at Tucson's Boneyard

View attachment 542369View attachment 542370

TUCSON, AZ (Tucson News Now) - History was made in Tucson at the world famous "Boneyard." Perhaps you were lucky enough to see the B-52 Stratofortress fly over the Old Pueblo on Friday.

For the first time, the Air Force regenerated a B-52 from the Boneyard, which is technically called the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (309 AMARG). AMARG is a one-of-a-kind specialized facility within the Air Force Materiel Command structure.


Once it took off, the crew flew it to Barksdale Air Force base in Louisiana, home to the oldest bomb wing in the Air Force. The B-52 made the flight with no problems. Maintenance crews at Barksdale will continue to install upgrade modifications to ensure configuration with the rest of the B-52 fleet.

Didn't make that connection from the initial post. That explains it:

- Refurbished, re-configured, and outbound

That's why it looks unfamiliar it's the newest generation flight model. Thanks!
 

cbear

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It sounds like they only taxied it, an never test flew it, before sending it off. Great job, but I would think additional testing would have been prudent.
 

USAFSS-ColdWarrior

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B-52H 61-0007 Departs Davis-Monthan AFB

First regeneration of a B-52H from AMARG - Feb 13, 2015 — at Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz.

http://vid607.photobucket.com/albums/tt156/pat038536/Facebook.mp4

Because its not a Youtube link, you're gonna have to click it to watch the clip.
That's A LOTT of horsepower putting that bird aloft.

Good job ! to those who reincarnated her from her sleep.

May those who fly upon those wings be kept safe and always blessed in the performance and accomplishment of their missions. AMEN.
 

Another Ahab

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B-52H 61-0007 Departs Davis-Monthan AFB

First regeneration of a B-52H from AMARG - Feb 13, 2015 — at Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz.

Because its not a Youtube link, you're gonna have to click it to watch the clip.
That black exhaust is a signature:

- Remember seeing one a few years back over Arlington National Cemetery for a burial flyover. Impressive (especially at that low "Arlington" altitude).

It kind of surprised me the amount of black smoke that poured out of that thing.
 

pat038536

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The last A-10C, Serial No. 80-0185, to undergo Helmet Mounted Cueing System (HMCS) retrofit modifications at AMARG arrived on March 9, 2015. The aircraft, originally outfitted with HMCS under temporary modification authority returned to AMARG for full Time Compliance Technical Order (TCTO) certification. Retrofit modifications are being accomplished by AMARG technicians to verify all improvements made to HMCS since the 2012 temporary installations have been properly accomplished. Aircraft 80-0185 is the last of 12 Nellis AFB based A-10s to be retrofitted; retrofit operations began in October 2014.

11051943_818656948182656_6646280808765773592_o.jpg 11044564_818657001515984_2382210839515886049_o.jpg
 
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