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    755th keeps Compass Call jamming

    755th keeps Compass Call jamming

    Photo By Tech. Sgt. Betty Chevalier | Airmen from the 755th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron re-attach the leading line on a...... read more read more

    DAVIS-MONTHAN AIR FORCE BASE, AZ, UNITED STATES

    05.03.2013

    Story by Airman 1st Class Betty Chevalier 

    355th Wing

    DAVIS-MONTHAN AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. - How do you get a plane that weighs more than 100,000 pounds to get off the ground and keep flying? The 755th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron here has been doing just that.

    The unit’s mission is to provide a safe, reliable, mission capable EC-130H Compass Call aircraft to the 55th Electronic Combat Group for training and executing electronic warfare. The 755thAMXS, a unit owned by the 55th Fighter Wing out of Offutt AFB, Neb., spends hours at a time fixing these planes to ensure they can accomplish their mission.

    Compass Call is an airborne tactical weapon system that uses a heavily modified version of the C-130 Hercules airframe. The system disrupts enemy command and control communications and limits adversary coordination essential for enemy force management. In simple terms, the aircraft jams enemy radio signals.

    In the flight of 14, there are currently four aircraft deployed, four are at home, and the rest are undergoing regular inspections.

    “There are only 14 planes in the whole word that do this,” said Airman 1st Class Daniel J. Boutwell, 755th AMXS electronic warfare technician. “All of these are assigned to D-M.”

    The 755th AMXS is the longest deployed unit in the Air Force, supporting deployed missions for more than nine years. Airmen deploy for approximately five months at a time.

    Certain crew chiefs are assigned to specific planes and often become attached to their aircraft.

    “I love having my name on a plane,” said Staff Sgt. Matthew Williams, 755th AMXS crew chief. “My plane is deployed right now and I miss seeing my name on that plane.”

    As a staff sergeant, Williams has more responsibilities than lower ranking airman. The plane displays his name and a few crew members’ names as well.

    There are many different jobs in the 755th AMXS. One of the big ones is a crew chief. A crew chief’s main duties include taxiing the plane for take-off and landing, as well as refueling. They also work on the plane to take apart what is broken and put it back together.

    The biggest difference between a C-130H aircraft and the EC-130H Compass Call aircraft is that the EC-130H aircraft has multiple computers. Because of this, there are specific people who work on these computers. They maintain all subsystems in the back end of the EC-130H aircraft to make sure that operators have an aircraft that is going to fulfill mission requirements.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.03.2013
    Date Posted: 06.07.2013 14:07
    Story ID: 108269
    Location: DAVIS-MONTHAN AIR FORCE BASE, AZ, US

    Web Views: 207
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN