Munitions Systems Specialist: Difference between revisions
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===Munitions Operations=== |
===Munitions Operations=== |
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''Operations'' is responsible for the accountability and logistics for the entire munitions stockpile. Mr. James Coppi is responsible for buying lunch on Monday/Fridays to include Ice cream treats/goodies. The core of Ammo. According to Mr. Lacourt, Mr. Bradley, Mr. Tyson. "Those who worked in this area used to be classified under the 465X0A Supply career field, rather than the 461X0 Maintenance career field the rest of AMMO was under." Personnel attended technical school at Lowery AFB, Colorado and arrived at their first base to find themselves standing part-way between the Base Supply world and the world of AMMO. Before the early 1990s, while it was still a part of Supply, the shop was referred to as "AFK" (a Supply acronym designating munitions as the Air Force "K" account, as used in the automated Standard Base Supply System (SBSS)). When 465X0A left the Supply career field to merge with 461X0, the accountability for munitions needed to be separated from SBSS. The account code was changed to "AFV" to reflect accountability under a new, AMMO-specific system: the Combat Ammunition System, or "CAS." This new acronym never really caught on as a nick-name the way AFK did and as the new 2W0X1 career field became homogenized, the shop became more prominently known as either "Accountability" or "Munitions Ops", though it is still referred to as "AFK" by older Ammo troops. |
''Operations'' is responsible for the accountability and logistics for the entire munitions stockpile. Mr. James Coppi is responsible for buying lunch on Monday/Fridays to include Ice cream treats/goodies. The core of Ammo. According to Mr. Lacourt, Mr. Bradley, Mr. Tyson and Mr McCaffrey. "Those who worked in this area used to be classified under the 465X0A Supply career field, rather than the 461X0 Maintenance career field the rest of AMMO was under." Personnel attended technical school at Lowery AFB, Colorado and arrived at their first base to find themselves standing part-way between the Base Supply world and the world of AMMO. Before the early 1990s, while it was still a part of Supply, the shop was referred to as "AFK" (a Supply acronym designating munitions as the Air Force "K" account, as used in the automated Standard Base Supply System (SBSS)). When 465X0A left the Supply career field to merge with 461X0, the accountability for munitions needed to be separated from SBSS. The account code was changed to "AFV" to reflect accountability under a new, AMMO-specific system: the Combat Ammunition System, or "CAS." This new acronym never really caught on as a nick-name the way AFK did and as the new 2W0X1 career field became homogenized, the shop became more prominently known as either "Accountability" or "Munitions Ops", though it is still referred to as "AFK" by older Ammo troops. |
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===Other specialized shops=== |
===Other specialized shops=== |
Revision as of 20:18, 13 September 2010
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2008) |
- Ammo is also a commonly used abbreviation for ammunition.
The Munitions Systems Specialist career field (AFSC 2W0X1, previously 461X0), commonly referred to as AMMO, is the munitions and weapons branch of the U.S. Air Force.
Career Field Description
AMMO is responsible for maintaining the US Air Force's entire munitions stockpile. Various duties include shipping and receiving, building, testing, operating, protecting, inspecting, storing and performing maintenance on all types of conventional munition systems. AMMO personnel also operate and maintain a wide variety of equipment and electronic gear, from pallet jacks to 40-foot (12 m) tractor-trailer combination vehicles, all-terrain 10,000 pound forklifts, all the way up to 50,000 pound forklifts, and from small arms ammunition for rifles and pistols to large-scale guided bombs, to include AGM-65 guidance testing units and computer databases. Upon graduation from Air Force Basic Military Training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, Airmen assigned to the field attend an 8-week tech school at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas. Upon graduation from tech school, the new AMMO apprentice is sent to their assigned duty station.
Isolation and Culture
Due to safety concerns with the possibility of explosives accidentally cooking off and damaging a large portion of a base, the Munitions Storage Area (or "Bomb Dump" as it is commonly called) is usually isolated or barricaded from the rest of base. At some bases, such as RAF Welford in United Kingdom, the ride to work can take as long as fifty minutes, compared to a 4 or 5 minute commute for people in most other career fields. Isolation from the main base breeds a culture within the Munitions section where the troops go out of their way to take care of their own. While other Air Force career fields would find it necessary to go further up the chain of command for disciplinary matters, discplinary issues in ammo are not usually escalated out of the Bomb Dump.
Specific Jobs
AMMO has at least nine distinct working areas within the AFSC, all of which, when combined, make up one of the best career fields the USAF has to offer.
Equipment Maintenance
Trailer Maintenance, or TM, is hub of all maintenance for the job-specific trailer equipment that is unique to AMMO. Maintenance and Inspections are performed on Munitions Material Handling Equipment (MMHE) such as the MHU-141, MHU-110, LALS, UALS, and the newer MHU-226 bomb trailers.
Precision Guided Munitions
Missile Shop, or Precision Guided Munitions is responsible for the testing and maintenance of all conventional air-to-air munitions used on aircraft and all air-to-ground missiles. In some cases PGM will take responsibility for guided air-to-ground bombs as well.
Line Delivery
Line-D drivers are dispatched by Munitions Control and Weapons Expeditors at will. They are responsible for the safe and expedient handling and delivery of munitions from the bomb dump, or other storage locations, to aircraft. Drivers are held responsible for the accounting of their equipment and munitions movements via daily reconciliation, or "recon", which is an accounting of all these movements that is verified three ways between the flightline, Munitions Control, the Line-D driver, with a zero percent discrepancy tolerance.
Conventional Maintenance
CM is responsible for the construction, maintenance, and testing of all conventional air-to-ground munitions used on aircraft, ranging from chaff and flares to cannon ammunition and guided and unguided bombs. There is a joke among AMMO troops regarding guided vs. unguided bombs. "The Air Force is an equal opportunity employer. Being that we employ smart bombs, dumb bombs as well as retarded bombs."
Munitions Control
Control can be thought of as the nerve center of the bomb dump. Control tracks work crews, coordinates requirements, acts as a liaison for outside agencies, develops war plans, provides oversight for safety and security, and ensures the daily reconciliation of all munitions and related equipment against established inventories. A good control will always know where any assets are; mind you, we said "good", as this is not always the case. They also are the "gate keepers" or "door boys" to the Storage area.
Storage and Handling
Storage is responsible for storing and breaking out munitions required by Conventional Maintenance and Munitions Inspection, and is also responsible for the maintenance of the munitions storage facilities, usually called "igloos", "magazines", or revetments ("revvies"). Storage is also used to transport munitions over public right-of-ways to transfer munitions between different storage or shipping and receiving locations. Storage troops operate the majority of the heavier equipment found in the bomb dump, including "18 wheelers", heavy-rated forklifts, and cranes.
Munitions Inspection
All munitions items at various times need to be inspected for safety and compliance with technical instructions. Specially trained NCOs and Airmen known as Munitions Inspectors, accomplish this sometimes tedious task. Inspectors attend Inspector School, which lasts approximately 3 weeks and is usually conducted at the AMMO Schoolhouse, located at Sheppard AFB, Texas. However, due to cost restraints the two major commands of PACAF and USAFE have developed their own schools, allowing the school house the ability to come to the students. Inspectors are required to be appointed in writing by the Munitions Flight Chief, after an interview process and a few months of tedious on-the-job training, before they are actually able to be called Inspectors.
Munitions Operations
Operations is responsible for the accountability and logistics for the entire munitions stockpile. Mr. James Coppi is responsible for buying lunch on Monday/Fridays to include Ice cream treats/goodies. The core of Ammo. According to Mr. Lacourt, Mr. Bradley, Mr. Tyson and Mr McCaffrey. "Those who worked in this area used to be classified under the 465X0A Supply career field, rather than the 461X0 Maintenance career field the rest of AMMO was under." Personnel attended technical school at Lowery AFB, Colorado and arrived at their first base to find themselves standing part-way between the Base Supply world and the world of AMMO. Before the early 1990s, while it was still a part of Supply, the shop was referred to as "AFK" (a Supply acronym designating munitions as the Air Force "K" account, as used in the automated Standard Base Supply System (SBSS)). When 465X0A left the Supply career field to merge with 461X0, the accountability for munitions needed to be separated from SBSS. The account code was changed to "AFV" to reflect accountability under a new, AMMO-specific system: the Combat Ammunition System, or "CAS." This new acronym never really caught on as a nick-name the way AFK did and as the new 2W0X1 career field became homogenized, the shop became more prominently known as either "Accountability" or "Munitions Ops", though it is still referred to as "AFK" by older Ammo troops.
Other specialized shops
Some shops only exist at one base, or a limited number of bases, and other shops are often combined, depending on the mission of the given base. Examples of such shops are as follows:
TARRP - "Tactical Airmunition Rapid Response Package." 18 MUNS, Kadena AB, Japan, implements TARRP. This shop is responsible for keeping bombs and missiles loaded on aircraft pallets ready to be deployed at a moment's notice. The TARRP arsenal consists of munitions including, but not limited to, MK82s, MK84s, BLU109s, AGM-65s, AIM-9s, and AIM-120s.
STAMP - "Standard Air Munitions Package." 649 MUNS, Hill AFB, Utah and 651 MUNS, Lackland AFB, TX (Medina annex) implement STAMP. Similar to TARRP with the exception that the bombs and missiles are not already loaded onto aircraft pallets.
ISO Maintenance/Fabrication - 18 MUNS, Kadena AB, Japan, repairs ISOs and maintains PACAF's largest AMMO blocking and bracing lumber stockpile. Fabrication personnel, along with their Okinawan counterparts, repair ISOs and construct blocking and bracing for various ISO outloads. They also build wooden furniture for the "bomp-dump" and maintain 18 MUNS haunted house, known as "the haunted castle".
At other bases, Line-D and TM, CM and PGM, and even Control and AFK are combined into one shop, and other munitions organizations include nuclear weapons handling and storage.
Shakey the Pig
Shakey the Pig is the mascot of the 36th Air Base Wing's Munitions Squadron. Just within the gate of the bomb dump of Andersen AFB, a pig poke contains a living, wild pig that has become the bomb dump's "official" pet. Shakey has a "pig house" in the shape of a munitions igloo, a small pond, and a porcine play pen. Shakey has gone through numerous "upgrades"- as one pig dies, another wild piglet is caught in the wilds of the bomb dump's jungle and adopted as the next "Shakey". As late as December, 1994, the 36th MUNS was on version "Shakey the 5th", in November, 2006, the bomb dump at Andersen AFB was on version "Shakey the 8th", and as of November, 2009, the 36th MUNS was on "Shakey the 12th". Shakey is considered a dear pet by the AMMO troops of the 36th MUNS, and visitors always stand in invitation to visit and feed him, despite the fact that Shakey is penned within a "Controlled Area". Shakey is well cared for by his fellow AMMO troops, and given medical and dental care by the base vet as needed. His diet is now closely regulated and he is taken care of by AMMO troops, TSgt Juan Guzman and TSgt Patrick Mason. He also has a Papaya tree growing in his pen.
Shakey appears to be the only living, sanctioned (unit funds pay for food and health care) mascot of any current unit in the U.S. Air Force.
An article on Shakey in Airman Magazine, an official publication of the U. S. Air Force, can be read here:[1]
Duty Stations
Active Duty, Reserve, and Air National Guard AMMO personnel can be assigned any of a large number of military bases. Air Force bases that host non-combat aircraft or no aircraft such as Randolph AFB, TX and Vance AFB, OK have their Ammo mission accomplished by Air Force civil service personnel who are primarily made up of retired or prior service AMMO troops. Some past and present AMMO bases include:
(Note: This list may not be all-inclusive)
United States
- Andersen AFB, Guam;
- Barksdale AFB, Louisiana;
- Beale AFB, California (Home of AFCOMAC);
- Bolling AFB, Washington, DC;
- Burlington IAP, ANGB-VTANG, S. Burlington, VT;
- Cannon AFB, New Mexico
- Castle AFB, Atwater, CA., (Closed 1995)
- Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona;
- Dover AFB, Delaware;
- Dyess AFB, Texas;
- Edwards AFB, California;
- Eglin AFB, Florida;
- Elmendorf AFB, Alaska;
- Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota;
- Eielson AFB, Alaska;
- Fairchild AFB, Washington;
- F.E. Warren AFB, Wyoming;
- Gowen Field ANGB, Boise Airport, Boise, Idaho;
- Hickam AFB, Hawaii;
- Hill AFB, Utah;
- Holloman AFB, New Mexico;
- Homestead ARB, Florida;
- Hurlburt Field, Florida;
- Keesler AFB, Mississippi;
- Kirtland AFB, New Mexico;
- Lackland AFB, Texas;
- Langley AFB, Virginia;
- Luke AFB, Arizona;
- Little Rock AFB, Arkansas;
- Lowry AFB, Colorado (Technical School for AFSC 461X0/2W0X1. Closed September, 1993);
- Malmstrom AFB, Montana;
- Mather AFB, California (Closed as of October 1, 1993);
- McChord AFB, Washington;
- McClellan AFB, California (Closed as of July 13, 2001);
- Medina Annex - Lackland/Kelly AFB, Texas;
- Mountain Home AFB, Idaho;
- Minot AFB, North Dakota;
- Moody AFB, Georgia;
- Niagara Falls ARS, Niagara Falls, New York;
- Nellis AFB, Nevada;
- Offutt AFB, Nebraska;
- Pope AFB, North Carolina;
- Reno ANGB, Nevada;
- Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina;
- Shaw AFB, South Carolina;
- Sheppard AFB, Texas;
- Travis AFB, California;
- Tyndall AFB, Florida;
- Vandenberg AFB, California;
- Wheeler AFB, Hawaii (Transferred to U.S. Army November 1, 1991);
- Whiteman AFB, Missouri;
- Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio;
- Hancock Field ANGB, New York;
Asia
- Kunsan AB, South Korea;
- Kadena AB, Okinawa, Japan;
- Misawa AB, Japan;
- Osan AB, South Korea;
- Yokota AB, Japan;
- Danang AB, Vietnam;
- Tuy Hoa AB, Vietnam;
- Korat AB, Thailand;
- Takhli AB, Thailand;
- Tainan AB, Taiwan;
- Diego Garcia, British Indian Ocean Territory;
Middle East
- Al Kharj/Prince Sultan Air Base (PSAB), Saudi Arabia; Closed
- Al Udeid, Qatar;
- Dhahran, Saudi Arabia (Khobar Towers - Closed 1996);
- Ali Al Salem, Kuwait;
Europe
- Araxos, Greece;
- Aviano AB, Italy;
- Bitburg AB, Germany
- Camp Darby, Italy;
- Hahn Air Base, Germany; (Closed in mid-90's)
- Incirlik, Turkey;
- Morbach (Wenigerath) AMMO Storage Area Morbach, Germany;(Closed in 1995)
- Naval Air Station Keflavik, Iceland; (Closed September, 2006)
- Ramstein AB, Germany;
- RAF Alconbury, England;
- RAF Welford, England;
- RAF Lakenheath, England;
- RAF Mildenhall, England;
- Rhein-Main AB, Germany; (Closed December, 2005)
- Spangdahlem AB, Germany;
- Lajes AB, Azores Islands, Portugal
External links
- List of US Air Force bases
- http://www.ammotroops.com
- http://www.usafammo.com
- http://www.ammosoftball.net