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Shrink-wrapping
keeps vehicles battle-ready
By Franklin Fisher,
Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition,
Tuesday, February 17, 2004
OSAN AIR BASE, South Korea — If
security forces troops had to defend this
air base, armored personnel carriers and uparmored
humvees are just some of the equipment they
would need in a hurry.
And because those and other vehicles
need to be in ready-to-roll shape, the Air
Force goes to special lengths to keep them
that way.
It maintains some 400 vehicles
here in what it calls its war reserve materiel,
or WRM, fleet, and a big key to having them
battle-ready is to keep a major portion of
them in plastic shrink-wrap for three years
at a time. When it’s time for those to be
unwrapped, the remaining part of the fleet
is then shrink-wrapped.
Osan’s goal is to have 75 percent
of the fleet shrink-wrapped at a given time.
“Through research, the Air Force
has determined that shrink-wrapping vehicles
makes them last longer, and significantly
reduces overall maintenance costs during the
storage period," said Staff Sgt. Mark Olson
of the 51st Logistics Readiness Squadron,
part of the 51st Fighter Wing.
“It eliminates all environmental
influence upon the vehicles," said Olson,
"In other words, rain and moisture, humidity,
sand, dirt, anything like that is essentially
blocked out by shrink-wrapping the vehicle."
The squadron’s vehicle management
flight maintains the WRM fleet, which consists
of humvees, M-113 armored personnel carriers,
and such civil engineer construction equipment
as dump trucks and excavators, among other
types.
“These vehicles are used for the
first wave or strike, until communication
and supply lines can be established to the
theater,” Olson said.
The WRM vehicles also can be used
as backups in special cases. Base civil engineers
might use some of the construction equipment
if, for example, the regular construction
vehicles are in the maintenance shop.
And security forces can draw their
WRM vehicles for use during training exercises.
A work force of 24 South Korean
contract employees at Osan do the shrink-wrapping
and maintenance work on the WRM fleet.
Workers cover each vehicle with
the plastic sheeting, then seal it using a
“heat gun” that melts the plastic in the necessary
places.
But shrink-wrapping is actually
only the final step. It begins with mechanical
work.
“First of all the vehicle is put
into the highest standard condition that we
can possibly get the vehicle in,” Olson said.
“The next step is that we apply
preservatives to both the inside and the outside
of the vehicle,” Olson said. These include
preservatives in the coolant system, engine
and transmission. They also apply a paint
and tire preservative.
Electronic battery conditioners
and chargers are used to keep the batteries
at full capacity “to make sure the vehicle
starts the first time” it’s unwrapped, Olson
said.
That’s good news for 1st Lt. Ian
Dinesen of Osan’s 51st Security Forces Squadron,
a unit that would mount “an aggressive and
mobile defense” if the base were under threat.
“By maintaining these vehicles
in a ready state, it obviously allows us to
apply that combat power quickly and effectively
as possible,” Dinesen said.
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