Ground Crews Critical To Success In The Air
Soldiers assigned to the Contingency Operating Base in Adder,
Iraq with Bravo Company, 628th Aviation Support Battalion, strive
to make sure the AH-64 Apaches, UH-60 Black Hawks and CH-47
Chinooks are prepared to take anything a war zone may have in store
for them.
U.S. Army Photo
"Our primary job is to perform all the scheduled maintenance on
the CH-47, UH-60 and the AH-64," said Army Maj. John Kilby, the
company commander, a native of Rising Sun, MD. "We handle the
scheduled maintenance, but sometimes we get a call from one of the
[aviation unit maintenance companies] asking if we can fix
something, whether it's because they don't have the tools, parts or
people qualified to do the work." But the battalion's duties
are not limited to maintenance. "We help weigh aircraft and assist
with accident investigations," said Army Staff Sgt. Douglas
Kephart, a technical inspector in the quality assurance shop.
The 628th consists of its main group from Fort Indiantown Gap,
PA; Company C in York, PA; Detachment 1, Company B, from West
Trenton, NJ; and Bravo Company, 351st Aviation Support Battalion,
attached out of Lowell, MI. "Our shop can rebuild or repair most
components on all three aircraft," Kephart said. "The shop fixes
aircraft components and fabricates hydraulic hoses, and we go in
and make sure everything is being done according to the manual."
The maintenance facility here consists of a machine shop, sheet
metal shop, engine shop, nondestructive testing shop, propeller and
rotor shop, an armament shop for the AH-64 and an avionics
shop.
The Bravo Company soldiers who were attached to the 628th ASB
have been drawing on the experience of their counterparts. Kephart
has been with the 628th since 1993, he said, but many of the
members of the 351st are new to the military. "Most of us had
very little experience," said Army Pvt. 1st Class Nick Gregaitus, a
CH-47 mechanic from Lowell, MI. "Most of us just graduated from
[advanced individual training]."
U.S. Army Photo
Gregaitus will be trading rotor blades for wheels when he gets
back to the United States. He will be using his experience working
on Chinooks in Iraq to enhance his new job as an Army technician
for the National Guard, working as a vehicle mechanic. "I got the
job before I left," he said. "I'll get the best of both worlds for
a while."
So far, the 28th Combat Aviation Brigade aircraft have conducted
more than 12,000 hours of air operations, carried 29,000 passengers
to various locations in Iraq and Kuwait and airlifted 1.3 million
pounds of cargo. The Black Hawks have been conducting medical
evacuation operations since December, including two major casualty
airlift operations in aircraft serviced by Bravo Company.
ANN Salutes Army Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Mullett, serving with the
28th Combat Aviation Brigade.