Making The Falcon A Winter Bird
Airmen from the 8th Maintenance Squadron corrosion shop recently
completed painting an arctic scheme on one of their F-16 Fighting
Falcons -- a first for Kunsan Air Force Base in South Korea, and
soon Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska.

In October, Kunsan received its initial group of Block 40 F-16
aircraft under the Common Configuration Implementation Program from
Eielson. In return, Eielson would be getting Kunsan's Block 30
F-16s to be used as aggressor aircraft for its training exercises.
To help assist Eielson with this swap, Airmen from the 8th MXS
corrosion shop accepted the task of painting F-16 planes with an
arctic scheme.
"When the initial request to paint this jet at our facility came
in from PACAF, we immediately accepted the challenge," said Maj.
David Seitz, 8 MXS maintenance operations officer. "All we needed
was paint and technical data. The data sent to us was one piece of
paper with a five-inch, three-sided schematic. Our professional
maintainers were able to translate that small drawing into an
actual F-16."
With no technical data for an arctic scheme, Major Seitz said
the maintainers researched existing technical orders on the best
method for applying multiple colors and the two-colored stencils
required to produce the finished product. The colors and type of
paint are new to the Air Force inventory, which presented
challenges welcomed by the Airmen.
"This required round-the-clock paint crews from start to finish,
as the colors must be applied while the previous color is still
wet," Major Seitz said.
The job entailed sanding the old paint off the aircraft, putting
primer to help the paint hold better, and applying the new paint
scheme colors, said Senior Airman Kevin Stevens, 8 MXS aircraft
structural maintenance journeyman.
"This was a good learning experience," he said. "We were able to
work with colors and paint we've never worked with. I was happy
with the end result."

The white, black and gray aircrafts will be used as aggressor
planes assigned to Eielson for training exercises to include Red
Flag Alaska.
Currently the Air Force has three aggressor squadrons that have
the mission of replicating potential adversary aircraft in order to
provide training for U.S. and coalition combat air forces, said
Col. Eddie Osteen, 354th Operations Group deputy commander. There
are three different paint schemes applied to Eielson's aggressors
to be used throughout the year.
"The aggressor paint scheme is used to help 'friendly' aircraft
visually differentiate the 'enemy' aircraft from other friendly
F-16s. This is critical to prevent fratricide when blue and red
forces merge into a visual fight," Colonel Osteen said.
The Pacific Alaska Range Complex is the training area for Red
Flag-Alaska and comprises mountains, wooded hills and tundra,
Colonel Osteen said. The colors there range from green to brown in
the summer and white when the snow hits the ground during winter.
The colors do not represent any specific type of aircraft or
country.
"They (colors) are merely a way to quickly identify the
aggressor aircraft when within visual range. The variety of paint
schemes will make it more challenging to visually acquire the
aggressor aircraft depending on the background, be it sky or
earth," the colonel said.
Most of Eielson's new fleet of aircraft is being repainted as
aircraft undergo Falcon Star structural modifications in South
Korea, which will extend the service life of the F-16s, but the
efforts of Kunsan Airmen have ensured Eielson receives enough
aggressor-painted aircraft available to meet the base's needs, said
Lt. Col. Mark Murphy 354th Maintenance Group deputy commander.
"Kunsan's contributions have been critical to our ability to
prepare for the 2008 Red Flag-Alaska schedule. Eielson's Airmen
will make up some of the difference, but even at full capacity our
corrosion hangar doesn't have the ability to close the flashes on
five aircraft and completely repaint two jets in the arctic paint
scheme, which is no easy task with their (Eielson Airmen)
workload," Colonel Murphy said. "Thanks to Kunsan's generous
assistance, Eielson should have 14 aggressor-painted aircraft
available to meet April's Red Flag schedule, which wouldn't have
been possible otherwise."
Major Seitz said the work put in by the corrosion shop resulted
in a great product.
"Our experts overcame several challenges to produce a truly
unique F-16 that will test aircrews participating in Red Flag
Alaska for decades to come," he said. "I'm truly proud to serve
with these 'make it happen' Airmen."

The corrosion shop is currently working on the third arctic
scheme F-16 that will be used in Red Flag Alaska 2008.
(Aero-News salutes Staff Sgt. Alice Moore, 8th Fighter Wing
Public Affairs)