Practice Repair Techniques On Fleet Of C208s
While Iraqi air force pilots continue flying sorties to aid
stability in their nation, Iraqi maintainers on the ground at
Kirkuk Regional Air Base have achieved important benchmarks to keep
their fleet in the air.
Airmen with the Iraqi air force's 3rd Squadron took over a wide
variety of maintenance duties on the unit's Cessna 208 Caravan
fleet that's used for intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance, a task formerly performed by US contractors.
"The 3rd Squadron was recently asked to transition from
contracted maintenance to full Iraqi support," said Air Force Capt.
Gordon Beran, 870th Expeditionary Air Advisory Squadron combat
aviation advisor. "Having the ability to take over maintenance for
their new fleet is very important. It brings them one step closer
to a fully autonomous air force."
The all-Iraqi crews perform Level 1 maintenance tasks such as
aircraft launch and recovery, pre-flight maintenance, ground
handling and aircraft servicing. This was no simple undertaking for
the Iraqi maintainers, who had no experience with Western-style
aircraft and whose English-speaking abilities are limited.
"While the Cessna 208 is fairly basic, these aircraft are
equipped with state-of-the-art surveillance technology found on
most US Air Force advanced weapon platforms," Beran said. "The
aircraft takes a lot of training for a pilot to operate - and takes
just as much for the maintainer."
The maintainers here received their previous training with
Russian equipment that the old Iraqi air force used during Saddam
Hussein's regime, the captain added.
To meet the challenges of maintaining an unfamiliar aircraft,
the Iraqis relied heavily on their experience, but also worked hard
to understand the endless pages of technical orders that deal with
the Cessna 208. Airmen from the Coalition Air Forces Training Team
-- a collection of US servicemembers who advise and train Iraqi
airmen -- always are on hand to guide them.
Since the 3rd Squadron moved from Basra to Kirkuk a few years
ago, the program has made leaps and bounds to aid stability efforts
in Iraq, Beran said.
"The Cessna 208 provides overwatch for oil pipelines that run
from Kirkuk to Basra, where the oil is then exported to provide
revenue for Iraq," Beran said. "Aircrews have witnessed numbers of
insurgents planting bombs on various pipelines and power grids, and
alerted the US and Iraqi army to handle the situation. These
efforts show the Iraqi air force is making extremely important
contributions to help stabilize their country."
The 3rd Squadron's maintainers seem to agree and believe that
the maintenance transition is another piece of the pie for the
Iraqi air force to achieve its goals.
"Just a few years ago, the Iraqi air force was a very small
organization," said an Iraqi air force colonel who works as the 3rd
Squadron chief engineer. "We now have maintainers and technicians
taking control of the maintenance of our aircraft, and we're
working with the Americans to learn their maintenance rules so our
air force can have a good future.
"The American aircraft here are very different than what the
Iraqi maintainers are used to," he continued. "The systems - such
as Global Position System - are very advanced, and our aircraft in
the old Iraqi air force never had such technology. But we are
learning as much we can, and are very happy to have this
opportunity."
Coalition trainers say the 3rd Squadron airmen have exceeded
expectations, and that the transition so far has been successful.
"Just a few weeks ago, the squadron had an aircraft that was
grounded because a part broke," Beran said. "We wanted to see what
solution they would come up with on their own."
The Iraqi chief engineer weighed his options and decided to
transfer parts from another aircraft that had accumulated more
flight hours and was closer to its next scheduled maintenance
inspection -- a process known as "cross-canning." The Iraqi airmen
placed an order for the new part, then broke out their technical
orders - which are all in English - and expertly repaired the
Cessna 208 with practically no help from their coalition training
team, Beran said.
The cross-canning method properly balances fleet health through
flight-hour management and results in more aircraft availability
for counterinsurgency operations, Beran said. "This is a great
example of the Western influence we've been advising," he said.
"The Western influence isn't right or wrong - it's just different
and new to the Iraqi air force. But their ability to grasp those
concepts on their own shows the progress they've made. These guys
know what they are doing."
(Aero-News salutes Air Force Senior Airman Eric Schloeffel,
with the 506th Air Expeditionary Group Public Affairs
Office.)