by Airman 1st Class Jordyn Fetter
35th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
5/12/2015 - MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan -- After
a two-year process, the installation of a Type III hydrant system was
officially recognized during a ribbon cutting ceremony here May 11.
The system upgrade allows R-12 fuel servicing vehicles to refuel
aircraft at Misawa via an underground constant pressure fuel system that
transfers fuel directly from an underground tank to the aircraft -- a
massive improvement from the previous system.
Lt. Gen. Sam Angelella, U.S. Forces Japan and 5th Air Force commander,
conducted the ribbon cutting ceremony alongside base leadership to
unveil the new system.
Before the construction of the Type III hydrant system was completed,
the aircraft refueling process here involved driving four to six R-11
fuel servicing vehicles back and forth from fuel tanks to the aircraft.
It was time consuming and largely inefficient for operational demands.
"The R-11s can only issue so much fuel before they have to be
disconnected and replaced with another vehicle," said Staff Sgt. Derek
Schmidt, 35th Logistics Readiness Squadron field hydrant supervisor.
Since only a handful of R-11 trucks are kept on base, Misawa's ability
to refuel aircraft was limited by the number of trucks and the time
needed to drive back and forth to refill them. For 70 years, this was
the only way Misawa refueled aircraft.
The system, which was previously approved by Angelella during his time
as the 35th Fighter Wing commander from 2005-2007, was first used in
February 2015. Angelella was able to see it come into fruition in front
of a crowd of Airmen involved with the hydrant system.
Compared to an R-11, the R-12s can continually fill an aircraft without stopping, said Schmidt.
Comparable to pumps at a gas station, hydrants were placed at strategic
parking stations on the flight line, bypassing the need to ferry the
fuel in trucks. Because of the efficiency created by this system, Misawa
is now able to serve as a high-volume and high-speed pit stop for
transport aircraft moving people and cargo through the Pacific theater.
"We're now able to support heavier aircraft so they don't have to fly to other bases," Schmidt added.
Additionally, the new system saves both time and manpower because it
only requires one Airman to refuel aircraft in almost one-third of the
time, whereas the previous system required up to four Airmen and took up
to four hours to refuel.
"Despite personnel and budget cuts, we'll still be able to refuel five
to seven big airplanes with half the people and probably half the time,"
said Angelella. "The money and efficiency to be able to do our
contingency missions will really pay off."
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
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