by Senior Master Sgt. Denise Johnson
Pacific Air Forces Public Affairs
11/19/2013 - OHAKEA, New Zealand -- Royal
New Zealand Air Force Airmen fabricated a 4-inch metal plate to repair a
malfunction on a United States Air Force C-17 Globemaster III at RNZAF
Base Ohakea here Nov. 15 during Exercise Kiwi Flag.
The auxiliary power unit inlet door target sensor was faulty which was
causing a warning light to illuminate during preflight checks. The fault
grounded one of the two C-17s deployed to New Zealand in support of
Kiwi Flag and its overarching exercise, Southern Katipo.
"It's one small part with big repercussions," said Master Sgt. Adam
Keele, 517th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron production superintendent.
"We had to find a fix fast or wait for a part to be shipped from
overseas, so we reached out to our Kiwi counterparts."
Keele, a Victor, Montana, native, reached out to a RNZAF liaison for
assistance in contacting the local RNZAF Maintenance Support Squadron.
Corporal Gene Angus, RNZAF aircraft technician in the squadron's
structural repair bay, was first to greet the American maintainer,
"Sergeant Keele came over last night with one of our warrant officers
and asked if we might be able to help out by fabricating this part,"
Angus explained. "We were happy to help out, so we began our research
when they left."
The structural team stayed after hours to determine whether or not the
fabrication was feasible. The following morning two U.S. Airmen
delivered a technical drawing of the part.
"They handed us the paper and told us, 'This is what we actually want.'
We looked over the specifications and told them it wouldn't be a problem
to come up with a plan ... so we went to work," Angus said.
The RNZAF technician consulted RNZAF Leading Aircraftsman, Karl
Waiariki, also from the structural repair bay. The two compared the
specifications with the materials they had in-stock, determining they
could fabricate the part with a slight difference in the grade of metal.
"We looked up the ultimate tensile strength; the technical drawing
called for 155,000 PSI. The stock material we used, 301 half-hard
stainless steel, is rated at 150,000 PSI, so it's not much difference at
all -- though it still required an engineer to sign-off on [the
disparity]," Waiaraki said.
The grade of steel indicates the different heat treatments which result in different temper states.
"It's my responsibility to make sure we maintain the integrity of the
maintenance done on the aircraft," Keele said. "The difference, though
nominal, had to be approved by an engineer from Boeing, the aircraft
manufacturer."
Keele went to work on the approval process, while the RNZAF Airmen went to work building the part.
Waiaraki said he used a radius gauge to make sure he created an exact
5-degree angle ... "that had to be precise so we did a bit of maths to
find the dimensions because the radius of the bend affects the length,"
he explained. "You're measuring the outside of the radiuses; you can't
just put that number in and bend it -- you have to make it bigger or
smaller depending on how you bend it, so you do the maths to figure it
out."
The minimum bend radius came out to 160,000 according to Waiaraki's
calculations. When he applied the part's technical specifications to the
math equation, he got 170,000, a safe level above the minimum.
"You can't go any tighter than that because you'll be in danger of fatigue cracking," he said.
With the research, measurements and material collected, the RNZAF
crafted the critical piece of metal into a new APU inlet door sensor
target in less than 2 hours.
"We knew the part was ready, so all we needed was the engineer approval -- which was in-work," Keele said.
Keele walked through the same doors less than 24 hours after his first
visit to the structural repair bay to pick up the newly-crafted part,
engineer approval safely in-hand.
"We'll have this part in before the morning and be up and running
again," Keele said. "We couldn't have done it without these guys -- it's
one of the benefits of exercises like these: we build relationships and
learn who has what capability and how we can benefit one another. We
also develop a deeper respect and appreciation for our fellow service
members ... I think we will all take a lot away from Kiwi Flag,
including some newfound friendships."
Waiaraki, who typically works on Iroquois helicopters, C-130 Hercules'
and P-3 Orions, said he embraced the opportunity to work on the C-17 and
to develop his skills further.
"I didn't think I'd get to touch any foreign aircraft when this exercise
started," he said. "I certainly didn't expect anything like this, but
it's standard for this bay: we're happy to step up to anything that
comes our way and give it go. We can only get better by interacting with
fellow professionals and overcoming challenges together."
Kiwi Flag is a multilateral RZNAF-sponsored tactical airlift exercise
conducted annually in New Zealand. Service members from the USAF, RNZAF,
Royal Australian Air Force, Republic of Singapore Armed Forces and
French Armed Forces of New Caledonia are participating. Air operations
will be conducted out of RNZAF Base Ohakea, New Zealand. Kiwi Flag
personnel will provide air support to Exercise Southern Katipo, New
Zealand Defence Force's largest-ever multilateral joint force amphibious
exercise with eight other nations participating: United States Army and
Marines, Australia, Canada, France, Malaysia, Singapore, Papua New
Guinea and Tonga.
"We are just glad to help out in any way we can," Angus said. "It shows
we can support one another when called upon and that's what exercises
like Kiwi Flag are all about. It's a win-win."
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