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Hundreds of tankers & reconnaissance jets grounded (Read 103 times)
 
Roger Whitcomb
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Hundreds of tankers & reconnaissance jets grounded
Feb 15th, 2023 at 7:47pm
 
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Hundreds of tankers, recon jets grounded in hunt for faulty tail pins


By Rachel S. Cohen and Stephen Losey​
Defense News


February 15, 2023

WASHINGTON — The Air Force is speeding up its hunt for a faulty component on hundreds of KC-135 Stratotankers that, if it failed in flight, could cause an aircraft’s tail to fall off.

Air Force Materiel Command on Tuesday directed maintainers to inspect the entire KC-135 aerial refueling fleet, as well as the RC-135 family of reconnaissance planes and the WC-135 Constant Phoenix radiation sensing jet, for potentially faulty tail pins before their next flight.

As of Sunday, 24 of the 90 KC-135s that were inspected had noncompliant pins, the Air Force said. Planes with the proper parts have been cleared to fly.

The components, formally known as “vertical terminal fitting pins”, help attach an aircraft’s tail fin – its vertical stabilizer – to the rest of the fuselage. The tail gives pilots control over a plane while turning.

“We’re taking this action out of an abundance of caution, after consulting with our engineering experts,” said Col. Michael Kovalcheck, senior materiel leader in the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center’s legacy tanker division. “We are working closely with Air Mobility Command and all operational users and anticipate all potentially affected aircraft will be inspected.”

Checking the pins takes about half an hour, AFMC said Wednesday. An earlier order, issued on February 10, called for the aircraft to be inspected within 15 days.

The service owns about 360 KC-135s, plus around three dozen RC-135 and WC-135 variants that are based on the same Boeing-built fuselage. The Stratotanker fleet entered service in 1956, followed by the RC-135s in 1964 and the WC-135s in 1965.

KC-135s with problematic pins are allowed to fly to a repair shop that will replace the part, AFMC said. The KC-135 program office said the fix can happen within a day and most will take place at the Oklahoma City Air Logistics Complex, which is where the Stratotanker undergoes depot maintenance.

A leaked memo that was posted to the unofficial “Air Force amn/nco/snco” Facebook page on February 9 first said 207 KC-135s may have had faulty pins installed. The Air Force confirmed the memo’s authenticity to Defense News.

The memo noted that the faulty pins may have been installed during planned depot maintenance between June 2020 and December 2022. Each KC-135 has a pair of pins, one on each side of the vertical stabilizer, and they are replaced during every round of heavy maintenance.

Metallurgical analysis conducted on two nonconforming pins in January found several discrepancies. They were too small, made of the wrong material, and had insufficient plating, the memo said.

If even one were to fail in flight, the results would be catastrophic, the Air Force said.

“Should one pin fail, the other would not be able to carry the remaining load and the vertical stabilizer would depart the aircraft,” the memo said.

The Air Force is in the process of retiring its KC-135s to make way for the new KC-46 Pegasus tankers. Active duty Stratotankers are based around the world at Beale AFB, California; RAF Mildenhall, England; MacDill AFB, Florida; Kadena AB, Japan; McConnell AFB, Kansas; Joint Base Andrews, Maryland; Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina; Altus and Tinker AFBs, Oklahoma; Fairchild AFB, Washington; and nearly two dozen Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard installations.

The RC-135 and WC-135 fleets are headquartered at Offutt AFB, Nebraska.
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No Faulty Tail Pins Found on Offutt Based Jets
Reply #1 - Feb 20th, 2023 at 2:52pm
 
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Air Force inspections find no faulty tail pins on Offutt recon jets


A crowd watches one of the 55th Wing’s RC-135s land at Offutt Air Force Base in September. The aircraft were among those that underwent urgent inspections for a faulty pin. The inspections found that none of the RC-135s or WC-135 currently flying missions out of Offutt or deployed overseas have the faulty part.

The tails of the 55th Wing’s Offutt-based reconnaissance planes appear to be safe from falling off.

Last week, the Air Force Materiel Command ordered urgent inspections of the “vertical terminal fitting pins” on about 400 Air Force and Air National Guard KC-135 tanker and RC-135/WC-135 reconnaissance jets after discovering some of the pins were the wrong size and made of the wrong materials.

Two of the 5-inch pins attach the tail of the four-engine jets to the rear fuselage. If either should fail in flight, Air Force officials said, the tail would separate from the aircraft.

During 30-minute inspections carried out this week, none of the RC-135 or WC-135 jets currently flying missions out of Offutt or deployed overseas were found to have faulty pins, a spokesperson for the Air Force’s Air Combat Command said in an email.

However, faulty pins apparently were found on at least one RC-135 currently undergoing major overhauls at a maintenance facility in Greenville, Texas. The pins are routinely replaced during these overhauls, which take about one year to complete.

The spokesperson didn’t specify how many RC-135s now in Texas contained faulty pins, but she said any that did “will have new hardware installed before they depart the facility.”

At least seven Offutt-based RC-135 jets are currently undergoing extended overhauls, according to a veteran of the unit who uses flight-tracking software to follow 55th Wing operations as a hobby.

He said at least 14 other RC-135s and one WC-135 radiation-detection aircraft have flown recent missions for the 55th Wing.

An Air Force memo leaked and posted Feb. 9 to an unofficial Facebook page for Air Force enlisted personnel said that 280 of the pins were purchased from a contractor for installation during major overhauls but removed from the supply chain after questions were raised about their quality in spring 2022.

The memo, which an Air Force official confirmed is authentic, said the pins were in supply from June 2020 to December 2022 and could have been installed on as many as 207 jets that received overhauls during that time period.

“Failure of one pin would result in the loss of the vertical stabilizer,” the memo said.

It’s not clear why the pins continued to be used for several months after their quality was found to be deficient.

In response to an inquiry from The World-Herald, a spokesperson wrote in an email that the Air Force “will be able to provide more details once the (inspections) conclude.”
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