Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Travis AGE shop: No airpower without ground power

    Travis AGE shop: No airpower without ground power

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Madelyn Brown | Airman 1st Class Mandy Walden, 60th Maintenance Squadron aerospace ground equipment...... read more read more

    TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, CA, UNITED STATES

    11.22.2011

    Courtesy Story

    Air Mobility Command Public Affairs

    Story by: Airman Madelyn Ottem
    60th Air Mobility Wing Public Affairs

    TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. -- The three sections of the 60th Maintenance Squadron's aerospace ground equipment, or AGE, shop -- inspection and repair, support and servicing -- work as a team to keep Travis Air Force Base aircraft in flight.

    The AGE shop works every day to sustain serviceable aircraft. All three departments constantly undergo training, maintenance and inspection, which made them ready for a Logistics Compliance Inspection Program that took take place Nov. 14 to 18.

    Airmen in the AGE shop are ready to take on the inspection and feel prepared, according to Airman 1st Class Mandy Walden, 60th Maintenance Squadron AGE servicing section.

    Airman 1st Class Harold Tatmon works in the inspection and repair section. He fine tunes, repairs and inspects equipment necessary for maintainers to work on aircraft on the flight line, such as the dash 86 generator, which is used to provide power to aircraft while having maintenance performed.

    The four pillars of maintenance -- safety, training, technical data and attitude -- were the focus of the LCAP inspection for Tatmon and the rest of the Airmen in the AGE shop.

    "I have confidence in myself and the shop because I know we work hard every day to fulfill the mission," Tatmon said.

    Although inspection and repair airmen constantly work, the shop is never short on tasks.

    "Every week, there is something that needs to be inspected," Tatmon said. "Our work is never done because there is always something to fix or inspect."

    In the support section, the airmen have the major responsibility of being accountable for all the tools checked out, down to the last bolt. In addition, they are the primary resource for hazardous material disposal.

    "We have 50 different types of oils that need to be properly disposed," said Tech. Sgt. Nathan Preszler, program manager of the support section.

    Preszler has confidence in the support section and the Airmen working in it for the upcoming inspection.

    "This shop is the cream of the crop and the results will show how hard we have worked," he said.

    Airmen in the servicing section spend the majority of their time on the flightline. Their main responsibility is to refuel and deliver equipment necessary for aircraft maintainers to effectively and accurately work on the aircraft.

    Walden spends her shifts in the servicing section, driving the bobtail on the flight line and inspecting generators whenever she picks them up or drop them off.

    Walden said they were ready for the LCAP inspection.

    The AGE mission is very important because without AGE the aircraft would never get fixed or fly on their scheduled times, Tatmon said.

    "Our mission is to maintain AGE equipment so that we can support other missions and aircraft out on the flight line," he said. "That way the mission as a whole gets accomplished."

    LEAVE A COMMENT

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.22.2011
    Date Posted: 11.22.2011 10:53
    Story ID: 80401
    Location: TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, CA, US

    Web Views: 79
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN