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    Avionics flight ensures aircraft equipment mission ready

    Avionics flight ensures aircraft equipment mission ready

    Photo By Tech. Sgt. James Hodgman | Senior Airman Ramanon Saint-Fort, 379th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron avionics...... read more read more

    AL UDEID AIR BASE, QATAR

    02.09.2016

    Story by Tech. Sgt. James Hodgman 

    379th Air Expeditionary Wing

    (This article is part two of a three-part series on the 379th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron)

    AL UDEID AIR BASE, Qatar - The 379th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron’s Avionics Flight at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, manages an $83 million electronic warfare pod fleet and provides critical support to ensure aircraft stay mission ready.

    The flight manages the only Avionics Consolidated Repair Facility in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility and services equipment on five different air frames including the F-15 Eagle and B-1B Lancer.

    In the past six months, the flight has performed 56 maintenance inspections and produced more than 1,000 line replaceable units. LRUs can be removed from an aircraft to be quickly fixed or replaced, such as a joystick from an F-15 or an antenna from a B-1B.

    Staff Sgt. Charles Filholm, 379 EMXS B-1B Lancer offensive avionics back shop team leader, from Perry, Georgia, said the avionics flight has an incredible impact on the mission.

    “When our aircraft need something fixed, so they can fly, we get it done,” Filholm said. “It’s a group effort; everyone in this shop is mission and team oriented. Every one of us wants to see those planes flying day after day.”

    The avionics flight, which has more than 30 Airmen assigned, consists of two sections, the avionics intermediate section and the electronic countermeasures section. The AIS team focuses on providing intermediate-level maintenance support for F-15, F-16 Fighting Falcon, B-1B, A-10 Thunderbolt II and C-17 Globemaster III avionics systems. The ECM team provides maintenance support for the ALQ-184 and ALQ-131 electronic warfare pods.

    Senior Airman Alex Mohr, 379 EMXS EW team member from Dayton, Ohio, is one of more than a dozen Airmen who work in the ECM section.

    “We maintain our EW pods and perform periodic maintenance inspections on every one, three times a year,” Mohr said.

    An EW pod uses radio frequency radiation to jam enemy anti-aircraft weaponry. A pod receives a targeting signal from an enemy system, determines how to best counter that signal and then transmits its own signal, to confuse or block the enemy targeting signal.

    “Ensuring each pod is performing like it’s supposed to, is important work,” Mohr said. “We ensure the pod transmits the proper radio frequency techniques to counter whatever enemy equipment may be out there.”

    “For example,” Mohr said, “surface to air missile sites may try to hit our planes, so the pod attempts to jam the signals sent from those SAM sites.”

    The AIS team repairs a variety of aircraft equipment, including radar and flight control systems.

    “We do a lot of work in this facility,” Filholm said. “We’ve repaired antennas, power supplies, countermeasures boxes and much more.”

    The AIS team maintains 11 test stations capable of replicating signals from five airframes to ensure flight systems are operating at the proper frequencies. The section receives approximately 54 LRU’s a week.

    With every repair, the avionics team saves the Air Force thousands. Over the past six months, the flight saved the Air Force $25 million by avoiding shipping and repair costs associated with shipping equipment back to the United States.

    “Having us here enables us to repair equipment needed for all of our airframes in the AOR and get that equipment out swiftly and efficiently,” Filholm said.

    “A CRF prepositioned in the AOR, increases responsiveness to the warfighter, streamlines the logistics trail, and provides an inherent capability imbedded into the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing to fix, test, and overhaul LRU’s to ensure we have mission ready aircraft to support mission requirements,” said Maj. Joshua Depaul, 379 EMXS commander.

    Depaul said he’s proud of his maintainers.

    “It takes an integrated team across the AEW to generate combat airpower; every functional area contributes to that end,” he said. “As a direct combat support agency, our maintenance professionals take great pride in ensuring the safety and reliability of the aircraft and equipment we maintain.”

    “We ensure the best pilots in the world can safely and effectively prosecute targets, acquire critical intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, refuel our joint and coalition partners, and sustain the fight,” Depaul added. “I am extremely proud of our avionics team and their ability to support the warfighter.”

    In 2015, the avionics team produced more than 4,000 LRU’s, sustained a 91 percent quality assurance pass rate and maintained a 100 percent mission capable EW pod rate.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.09.2016
    Date Posted: 02.12.2016 10:30
    Story ID: 188727
    Location: AL UDEID AIR BASE, QA
    Hometown: DAYTON, OH, US
    Hometown: PERRY, GA, US

    Web Views: 193
    Downloads: 0

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