Facility Opened In 1988, Closed By BRAC
Members of the Physiological Training Center concluded 22 years
of centrifuge training at Holloman AFB in New Mexico with its final
spin Oct. 27. The culmination of the centrifuge training mission at
Holloman AFB was directed by the Department of Defense Base
Realignment and Closure of 2005, which announced the consolidation
of fighter acceleration training and aerospace medicine research at
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, where a new centrifuge is being
built.
Centrifuge Control Room On Final Spin At Hollman
AFB
Air Force Photo
"The unique thing about the Wright-Patterson (AFB) device is
that we're going to combine the aircrew training mission and the
research mission into one, so we'll use the same device and the
same mission at once," said 1st Lt. Jennifer Smith, the commander
of the Physiological Training Center.
Since the centrifuge was first certified at Holloman AFB in
1988, it has been the only Air Force-owned human centrifuge used
for aircrew training. Operated by the U.S. Air Force School
of Aerospace Medicine, the centrifuge was used as a training device
to expose pilots to a high level of G-forces -- a measurement of an
object's acceleration -- which aircrews encounter in
high-performance aircraft, the lieutenant said. "We configured the
centrifuge for anything from the T-38 (Talon) to the F-22 (Raptor)
and every high-G aircraft in between," she said. "The primary
reason we conduct centrifuge training is to prevent G-LOC, which is
gravity-induced loss of consciousness. It can occur when pilots are
exposed to high Gz."
Upon its last spin, Holloman AFB's centrifuge had been used to
train nearly 32,000 students, including servicemembers from all
branches, North Atlantic Treaty Organization troops and members of
allied forces. "(We had the capability to train) all of the USAF
aircrew and NATO aircrews," Lieutenant Smith said. "We've trained
folks from the Chilean air force. We've had folks from Italy, from
Pakistan and most of our allied countries who don't have a
centrifuge of their own."
The last student to spin in Holloman AFB's centrifuge pulled
nine Gz in preparation for his upcoming assignment as an F-22 pilot
at Langley AFB, VA. He said he enjoyed the ride and was also
excited to be part of such a momentous occasion. "It's a pretty
cool feeling," said Capt. George Cannon, the 48th Operations
Support Squadron Tactics Division chief from Royal Air Force
Lakenheath, England. "This centrifuge has a lot of history so it
was a pretty cool thing to be the last person to go through, but
I'm sure the new one they're building at Wright-Patterson (AFB)
will be even better."
Captain Cannon was one of many students who spent a few hours in
a classroom and a few minutes in the centrifuge that day as part of
the final class. In contrast, many of the physiology technicians
spent years teaching in the classroom and working with the
centrifuge. For them, the last spin at Holloman AFB was
bittersweet. "The last centrifuge mission at Holloman is pretty
unique in that we've been training here for over 20 years,"
Lieutenant Smith said. "I've only seen the last three years of it,
so I haven't had as great of a tie as some people who've worked
with it since it was put in the ground in 1988, but I'm really
excited for the future of the centrifuge mission and the brand new
device that's being built at Wright-Patterson (AFB)."
According to an article on the official Wright-Patterson AFB
website, installation of the new centrifuge has already begun and
construction and certification is slated to be complete in 2012.
Until the device is certified, centrifuge training will be
performed by contractors at existing facilities at Brooks
City-Base, TX.
Although the final spin marked the end of this mission at
Holloman AFB, Lieutenant Smith said a couple members of the
Physiological Training Center will remain here to embark on a new
primary mission focused on optimizing human effectiveness. "We will
be a two-man team to conduct the physiology mission as the Holloman
Aerospace and Operational Physiology Training team," she said. "We
will pretty much be the human performance gurus for Holloman so
we'd like to integrate with different squadrons and see what we can
do to help maximize human performance on the base."
ANN Salutes Senior Airman Sondra Escutia 49th Wing
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