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DVIDS - News - Munitions Flight: More than ammo

9 Robins Air Force Base is home to 54 mission partners, most who share a common goal of providing depot-level maintenance to a variety of Air Force aircraft. Aircraft going through the sustainment process have egress items that need to be removed, stored, and carefully maintained. That job belongs to the 78th Logistics Readiness Squadron Munitions Flight. “There are hundreds of different types of egress items ranging from ejection seat catapults to gas lines and transfer assemblies,” said Master Sgt. Joshua Pectol, 78th LRS Munitions Flight chief.” The flight might be small, but it has a big impact. “We supply munitions for 32 different customers with an annual allocation of more than one million assets, valued at $2.9 million,” said Pectol. “We support munitions for security forces armory, Air Force Office of Special Investigation, explosive ordinance disposal, combat arms training and maintenance, Air Force Special Operations Command as well as egre

Fact check: Biden and Harris did not fly together

Fact check: Biden and Harris did not fly together
usatoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from usatoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How America Built Its Massive Fleet of B-29 Superfortress Bombers

How America Built Its Massive Fleet of B-29 Superfortress Bombers The first 16 of the more than 600 Superfortresses built at a plant in Georgia were assembled mostly by hand in early November 1943. Here s What You Need to Know: At its height, the plant in Marietta, Georgia employed 28,000 workers. When Maj. Gen. Curtis LeMay, the hard-driving commander of the Twentieth U.S. Air Force based in Guam, decided to change tactics in early 1945 to boost the effectiveness of the B-29 Superfortress, it was the Bell Aircraft plant in Marietta, Georgia, that ultimately provided him with the stripped-down bombers that played such a key role in ending the war in the Pacific.

SC National Guard names OSI SA new Command Senior Enlisted Leader > Nellis Air Force Base > News

By Capt. Jessica Donnelly, South Carolina National Guard Office of the Adjutant General / Published April 15, 2021 The South Carolina National Guard has announced Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Camille R. W. Caldwell as the next state command senior enlisted leader (CSEL) for the South Carolina National Guard. The 32-year military veteran also currently serves as a civilian Special Agent Criminal Investigator with Office of Special Investigations Procurement Fraud Detachment 5, Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Ga. (U.S. Air Force photo) The South Carolina National Guard has announced Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Camille R. W. Caldwell as the next state command senior enlisted leader for the South Carolina National Guard. In this role, she will be the advisor to the adjutant general for South Carolina, and other key leaders on matters of health and welfare of the Soldiers and Airmen assigned to the South Carolina Army and Air National Guard. (SC National Guard graphic)

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