AMMO (U.S. Air Force)

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Ammo is also a commonly used abbreviation for ammunition or (Aircraft Munitions Maintenance Organization).

The Munitions Systems Specialist career field (AFSC 2W0X1, previously 461X0), commonly referred to as AMMO, is the munitions branch of the U.S. Air Force. It falls under the Maintenance Group within Air Force organizational structures. Although the maintenance group(MXG) utilizes the AFI 21-101 for guidance, the Munitions Flight will additionally reference AFI 21-201.

File:Pisspot.jpg
AMMO Pisspot

Career Field Description

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, 40-foot (12 m) tractor-trailer combination vehicles, and all-terrain 10,000 pound forklifts, all the way up to 100,000 pound forklifts. The Munitions Storage Area(MSA) can be responsible for munitions from small arms ammunition (for rifles and pistols) up to large-scale guided bombs. 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.

Ammo 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. 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.

The official motto of the Ammo career field as learned by Ammo troops on the first day of technical training is "If you ain't Ammo, you ain't shit". Often seen abbreviated as I.Y.A.A.Y.A.S. In recent months, however, directives to Ammo Chiefs from Air Force leadership have instructed that "AMMO Calls" will no longer be tolerated at official functions (ALS/NCOA graduations, Awards Banquets, etc.), determining that to allow such rowdiness to occur in public will offend the remainder of the base populace. Most AMMO chiefs appear to disagree with this directive. However, at certain bases, this morale-boosting chant has been allowed at select functions, and even encouraged by base leadership; under strict terms that it is not done in an inappropriate manner or environment(promotion or other ceremonies with an encouraged family presence).

The Ammo career field has a very close family mentality. Ammo troops are expected to treat each other as brothers and sisters. They are expected to take care of each other and each other's families in times of need, especially true of the families of troops who are deployed. This also applies to former Ammo troops. Ammo troops are often known to be a rowdy but good-natured crowd with a reputation for drinking. As part of the family mentality and the reputation for drinking, Ammo troops are always expected to make sure other troops make it home safely no matter what hour the call should come, whether they personally provide a ride or arrange for a ride, all Ammo troops are generally held responsible for each other in this matter.

Ammo Challenge coins

Ammo challenge coins come in many shapes and sizes. Normally they are a large metal coin with Ammo related graphics and phrases either printed or stamped on both sides

Once a person becomes an AMMO troop they are considered an AMMO troop for life. It is expected of them to carry an Ammo coin (Also referred to as an "Ammo challenge coin") on their person at all times, on duty and off duty, for the rest of their life. Should any Ammo troop be asked to present their Ammo coin (Known as getting coin checked) at any time by another Ammo troop and they fail to present it, it is expected that the Ammo troop who does not present their coin buys a beverage of choice (normally beer) for the Ammo troop(s) who coin checked them. However, if the Ammo troop(s) being coin checked has their coin, the troop(s) who initiated the coin check is expected to buy the Ammo troop(s) that were checked a beverage of choice.

In order to coin check an Ammo troop, the person who initiates the coin check must have an Ammo coin and strike it on an object, normally a table or a bar to initiate the coin check. However, if a person inadvertently drops their Ammo coin and fails to catch it before it strikes a surface, they will be considered to be initiating a coin check, and any Ammo troop present will be expected to produce their Ammo coin to Challenge the inadvertent coin check, in which case the troop dropping their coin and any troop not able to present their coin, will be expected to buy the troops who successfully present their coin a beverage of choice.

Coins and coin challenges are not limited to AMMO, nor were they started by AMMO.[1]

Specific Jobs

Currently AMMO has at least nine distinct working areas within the AFSC. While under the current Air Force force structure Munitions personnel only are considered AMMO, the concept of AMMO was much more inclusive throughout the Viet Nam War era including all former 46XX0 career fields, normally under the Munitions Maintenance Squadron (MMS) heading. 461x0 Munitions Maintenance (commonly called BB Stackers), 462x0 Weapons Maintenance (commonly called Loaders or Load Toads), 463x0 Nuclear Weapons Specialist (commonly called Nuke Pukes and mushroom farmers) and 464x0 Explosive Ordnance Disposal all shared a common heritage and were consolidated under one organization. They worked together, lived in common dormitories, fought together and partied together until the 1980s when the divisive CMU concept was implemented and MMS personnel were farmed out to EMS (Equipment Maintenance Squadron), AGS (Aircraft Generation Squadron) and even Supply Squadron. Now Munitions personnel were ignobly assigned with such diverse and unrelated occupations as Wheel & Tire Maintenance, Aerospace Ground Equipment, Corrosion Control, and Phase Docks often losing the commonality of experience and pride previously achieved under the MMS concept.

The Munitions Flight is organized into three Elements: Production, Material, and Systems. The three elements encompass the individual shops listed below.

Equipment Maintenance

Also known as "TM," or called "Trailer Maintenance." This shop is the 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 trailers. Inspections generally include periodic inspections (for example every 90 days) and supervisory reviews. Inspections are documented on the AFTO form 244.

Precision Guided Munitions

'Missile Shop' or 'PGM' (Precision Guided Munitions) is responsible for the testing and maintenance of all conventional air-to-air and air-to-ground missiles used on aircraft.

Prior to the change in AFSC classifications, missile people were classed as 316x1L. After basic training at Lackland AFB they went to Lowry AFB near Denver, CO for six months of training to earn their "3" level.

Line Delivery

'Line-D' drivers are dispatched by Munitions Control and 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

'Conventional' is responsible for the construction, maintenance, and testing of all conventional air-to-ground munitions used on aircraft, ranging from chaff and flare to cannon ammunition as well as 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." ("Retarded bombs" is a reference to munitions which are assembled with an "Air Inflatable Retarder" fin, which allow for low altitude bombing by slowing the rate at which munitions descend upon their target by means of an inflatable balloon, AKA a "retarder.")

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. **Except Osan/Kunsan Control, they tend to fuck up CAS and lose accountability.**

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", and heavy-rated forklifts.

Munitions Inspection

Munitions Inspectors main responsibility is to ensure that at any given items in the stockpile are serviceable. All munitions items have predetermined intervals of when they need to be inspected for safety, serviceability, function-ability, and compliance with technical orders or (T.O.s), Air Force Instructions or (AFI's), DoD, EU, NATO, DoT/CFR/DoE, West Asian, etc... specific regulations. Specially trained NCOs and Airmen known as Munitions Inspectors accomplish this tedious task, it can vary from base to base on how many items and how often they have to do this with, as well as what all they are required to do. Munitions Inspectors also issue, inspect, segregate, and Lot select Munitions to/for different agencies around each base, i.e. Security Forces, Egress, EOD, Medical, and Chaplain's Assistants. They also deal with FOB's or (Found on Base munitions), which consist of either previous wars un-used/miss-placed munitions, or civilian munitions that some how got left unattended or lost, depending on what base they are stationed at. 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, two of the major commands 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 (and/or the Munitions Superintendent depending on the unit's specific requirements) after an interview process and a few months of tedious on-the-job training, and an "over the shoulder" review from the Senior Munitions Inspector or SMI.

Munitions Operations

'AFK' is responsible for the accountability and logistics for the entire munitions stockpile. Those who worked in this area used to be classified under the 645X0A Supply career field, In 1986 the career field changed to a maintenance career field 465X0 rather than the 461X0 Maintenance career field the rest of AMMO was under. Personnel attended technical school at Lowry AFB, Colorado and arrived at their first base to find themselves standing part-way between the Base Supply world and the world of AMMO. In the early days before automation all Air Force logistics accounts were designated by a three position prefix i.e. AFB (Supplies), AFE (Equipment), AFK (Munitions). Thus this office became known as 'AFK'. With the introduction of automation the 'A' was dropped and the munitions account was identified as 'FK' as used in the automated Standard Base Supply System (SBSS) but the old name 'AFK' still remained. When 645X0A left the Supply career field and became its own career field 465X0, the accountability for munitions needed to be separated from SBSS. The account code was changed to "FV" to reflect accountability under a new, AMMO-specific system: the Combat Ammunition System, or "CAS." This new acronym never really caught on as a nickname the way AFK did and as the new 2W0X1 career field became homogenized, the shop became officially known as either "Accountability" or "Munitions Ops", though it is still referred to as "AFK" by most 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 and 86 MUNS, Ramstein AB, Germany, 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 implements 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 "bomb-dump" and maintain 18 MUNS haunted house, known as "the haunted castle".

At other bases, Line-D and TM, Conventional and PGM, and even Control and AFK are combined into one shop, and other munitions organizations include nuclear weapons handling and storage. There are even very small units such as Jackson MS, (MS ANG) for example that only have two troops running all areas full-time.

Shakey the Pig

File:Shakey the Pig.jpg
Shakey the Pig

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Shakey the Pig is the mascot of the 36th Air Base Wing's Munitions Squadron, who is housed near the gate of the bomb dump of Andersen AFB. 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 of January, 2015, the 36th MUNS was on "Shakey the 16th".

Shakey is one of three living, sanctioned (unit funds pay for food and health care) mascots of any current units in the U.S. Air Force. LUCY the AMMO dog at Kunsan AFB is also a sanctioned squadron "mascot".[2]

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

Asia

Middle East

Europe

External links

References

  1. Challenge coin
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