By Air Force Tech. Sgt. Vicky Spesard 123rd Airlift Wing
LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan. 2, 2018 — From the bottom of the pack
to the top of the canopy, line by line, inch by inch, touching every seam,
stitch and grommet, Air Force Tech. Sgt. Christopher Brawner painstakingly
examines a parachute for anything that might make the lifesaving equipment not
function properly.
Brawner, an aircrew flight equipment journeyman with the
Kentucky Air National Guard’s 123rd Operations Support Squadron here, knows
what is at stake if the parachute doesn’t work -- the life of a fellow airman.
Aircrew members depend on Brawner and the aircrew flight
equipment team to support them from behind the scenes. The team’s mission is to
inspect and repair the equipment carried aboard aircraft to be used in the
event of a bailout or crash landing.
“Our job in this shop is to maintain the integrity of every
piece of safety and survival equipment that goes on the aircraft here,”
explained Brawner, who has worked on parachutes and other related survival gear
for many years. “All of us here understand that if an aircrew member has to use
our equipment, they are already having a bad day; we don’t want to add to that
by giving them equipment that doesn’t deploy properly.”
Jack-of-All-Trades
The equipment that the team manages is extensive. From
rubber rafts, life preservers and helmets, all the way down to the bandages in
the survival kit and the glint tape applied to aircrew uniforms, there are more
than 22,000 items that the 15 aircrew flight equipment personnel must be
knowledgeable about and adept at repairing.
Their skills include the ability to sew with a machine; darn
by hand; patch various materials using specialized adhesives; clean and
maintain optical equipment; clean and repair chemical suits; test locater
beacons, radios and batteries; and even wash each aircrew member’s oxygen
equipment by hand.
“Every single item that we are responsible for has a
mandated lifecycle, inspection and maintenance schedule,” said Air Force Senior
Master Sgt. Michael Hilbert, the superintendent of the aircrew flight equipment
team. “But in our shop, we go beyond what is required by the Air Force and we
inspect equipment that we place on the aircraft much more often.
“Our job is to provide the aircrew with the equipment that
will get them out of the aircraft safely, survive in whatever the environment
on the ground is and return home,” he continued. “We know these guys -- all of
the aircrew members here. Everything we do, down to the smallest detail, is
with the mindset to have our equipment ready when they need it the most.”
This attention to detail and the team’s dedication to the
mission is what instills trust within the aircrews, according to Air Force Lt.
Col. David Flynn, the 165th Airlift Squadron commander.
“If we have an in-flight emergency, our aircrews' lives
depend on the proper functionality of all emergency equipment on board the
aircraft,” Flynn said.
“The personnel from aircrew flight equipment are our
lifeline in an emergency situation in the aircraft. They are an extremely
dedicated group of people and we, as aircrew, know we can trust them with our
lives. They do an incredible job."
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