Risk of Natural disasters vs Military facilities

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
[QUOTE="Air Force Brat, post:

and Tyndall AFB, will be rebuilt, and those Raptor's will be returned to flight status, ASAP, that is whats going to happen next. God Bless you, God Bless the US Military, and God Bless the USA!AFB[/QUOTE]

Many of those Raptor's have been returned to flight status and rejoined their squadrons,, so now I'd like to hear some updates with an accurate number of Raptors initially "put up" in those hangars? and how many have been returned to flight status, and how many are being hangared at Tyndal AFB as they are awaiting maintenance and being returned to "flight status"?
 

timepass

Brigadier
Lockheed Martin engineers to determine the fate of Tyndall's F-22s damaged by Hurricane Michael - The Aviation Geek Club

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Initial assessments said that up to 17 of the F-22s had been destroyed, but top USAF officials later visited the base and said the damage wasn't as bad as first thought

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Oct 14, 2018
as I write the USAF Generals are working on how to 'make Tyndall great again', I guess, so let's wait for the next hurricane

I'm telling you it's slovenliness to house Raptors (which are supposed to be one of the most valuable USAF assets) that way, but who'd listen to an Internet kibitzer LOL
and
Hurricane Destruction Raised Concerns About F-22 Hangar Data

Oct 27, 2018
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The same storm that damaged multiple
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stuck on a Florida base also shook the U.S. Air Force’s confidence in existing data about the structural integrity of its aging facilities.

As Hurricane Michael swelled into Category 4 storm hours before striking Tyndall AFB in the Florida Panhandle on Oct. 10, the local Air Force wing commander, Col. Brian Laidlaw, needed to find shelter for multiple F-22s that could not be flown to another base. Laidlaw’s team turned to the Air Force’s engineering assessments, placing aircraft in the strongest hangars to hide from the storm.

“It turned out none of that [data] was very accurate,” said Gen. Mike Holmes, chief of Air Combat Command.

“The hangars that had a design life to take the highest winds turned out to receive some of the most damage,” Holmes said. “And some little flat ones that were rated to collapse at 75 kt. [wind speed] made it through he hurricane with no problems.”

Holmes said the base was exposed to wind gusts of nearly 150 kt., although Tyndall’s official measuring station registered peak wind gusts of about 112 kt. The eye of the hurricane passed directly over the base, exposing the area to the most severe winds and from opposite directions, Holmes said.

Hours after the storm passed over the base, Tyndall officials released an alarming assessment of the part of the base that housed all of the remaining F-22s. “The flight line is devastated. Every building has severe damage. Many buildings are a complete loss,” base officials said.

Despite the severity of the damage caused by the storm, top Air Force officials insist that none of the wreckage from the hangars that fell on the F-22s caused a total loss.

“All the F-22s will be fine,” Holmes told The DAILY on the sidelines of the Airlift/Tanker Association Conference here on Oct. 27.

The focus now is on rebuilding Tyndall, repairing the F-22s and applying lessons learned from the Air Force’s response to the storm.

A team, for example, is examining how the Air Force uses weather forecast data to plan fleet movements and base evacuations, Holmes said. Another team is examining the flaws in the data that led Laidlaw’s team to move aircraft into certain hangars based on erroneous assessments about those structures.

“We’ll certainly gather lessons from that,” Holmes said. “And then you have to figure out ways to pay for the lessons that you gather.”
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Oct 14, 2018and
Hurricane Destruction Raised Concerns About F-22 Hangar Data

Oct 27, 2018
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General Mike Holmes, "All the F-22's will be FINE!" great news, and those hardened hangars didn't do as well as expected, but Tyndal did take a direct hit from the eye, "with the highest winds, from opposite directions."

All good news, and the return to service of those F-22's will likely be expedited as a direct result of this storms extreme damage...
 
General Mike Holmes, "All the F-22's will be FINE!" great news, and those hardened hangars didn't do as well as expected, but Tyndal did take a direct hit from the eye, "with the highest winds, from opposite directions."

All good news, and the return to service of those F-22's will likely be expedited as a direct result of this storms extreme damage...
your view is as optimistic as it gets, I guess
 
Well this has highlighted the issues that the F-22 was having, they will fix it in the short term! It might even make "Mad Dog's" 80% availability now, LOL!
here's the AirForceMag story (dated 10/31/2018)
Final F-22s Get Ready to Take Off from Tyndall as Base Continues Recovery from Catastrophic Hurricane
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The most badly damaged F-22s are now flyable and will depart here within days as more than 1,300 airmen work to bring Tyndall back from the brink following one of the most powerful storms in history.

Seventeen F-22s remained at Tyndall as Hurricane Michael ripped through the base almost three weeks ago, with many officials here initially thinking there was no way Tyndall could come back from the blow. More than 95 percent of buildings on the base were damaged and almost all of the pine trees surrounding the flight line are snapped in half. The 325th Fighter Wing Commander Col. Brian Laidlaw told Air Force Magazine during a visit to the base this week that the damage was “surreal.”

Initial reports focused on the Raptors that remained, many of which rode out the storm in Hangar 5 on the East end of the flight line, which lost its roof in the storm. Air Force officials originally feared some of the Raptors might not fly again, but the service brought in experts and “methodically” removed the aircraft from their hangars. Airmen built three inflatable temporary hangars directly on the flight line, and the F-22s were towed there for assessment. Two F-22s took off for JB Langley-Eustis, Va., on Tuesday afternoon. Air Force Magazine saw two more Raptors in separate hangars at Tyndall and one more on the flight line Wednesday morning.

A minor storm was bearing down on the base Wednesday, bringing rain, limited winds, and slowing plans, but the final Raptors will leave Tyndall for more in-depth assessment and maintenance at Langley in a matter of days, not weeks, Laidlaw said Wednesday.

This progress is a far cry from initial reports and pictures, which showed the roof of hangars fallen onto F-22s and other aircraft. On Wednesday, focus shifted to the rest of the aircraft in the damaged hangar five. Trucks pulled T-38s, used as adversary aircraft, down the flight line to a separate hangar for assessment. Laidlaw said it is too early to determine the extent of damage to the T-38s or other aircraft, including QF-16 targeting drones and Twin Otter aircraft, until the hangar is cleared and a more detailed assessment is made.

“I like our methodology, and our methodology is to not make a problem any worse than it is,” Laidlaw said.

Debris, once scattered everywhere on streets and the flight line, now sits in large piles across the base. Dozens of tents now house many of the 1,300 airmen who are assessing buildings and bringing basic services back to the base.

Tyndall’s air traffic control tower, while largely intact, had its windows blown out and received water damage, so a small temporary tower sits directly off the runway directing the F-22s out and bringing in airlift aircraft carrying airmen, food, tents, vehicles, and other supplies.

Laidlaw said he is trying to determine what buildings can be saved by getting “eyes on” them all by civil engineers, RED HORSE airmen, and contractors. Many buildings need to be demolished, while others area easily saved. Then there are those “in-between” or “yellow” buildings that need a deeper assessment, he said.

Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of the Air Force Heather Wilson visited the base last week, where they announced that Tyndall’s F-22 training mission and the 601st Air Operations Center would be back up and running by the beginning of the year. Laidlaw said Wednesday he is working to determine the capacity available to meet that goal by doing everything possible to keep as much of the key infrastructure available.

“The way I see my role as installation commander is to, as smartly as possible, put Band-Aids on every window we can to keep as much in the decision space as possible,” Laidlaw said.

Tyndall has eight full-mission simulators for the F-22 school house, and the building housing those simulators was slightly damaged. There is still work to do, but they should be up and running by the timeline provided by Pence. F-22s will move to nearby Eglin AFB, Fla., for the flying portion of training.

In advance of the storm, Tyndall evacuated 11,000 people from the community and the most important thing is that no one got hurt, Laidlaw said. Many of these airmen have returned to damaged or destroyed homes, and still unanswered questions about their future, but they have proven to be resilient, he said. Squadron commanders are talking to airmen individually to determine the best way to address their concerns and what they need immediately, as a way to avoid broad “one size fits all” plans that would not be as effective, he said.

“They’ve been incredibly patient with us, I appreciate that,” Laidlaw said. “By and large their spirits are high. They are airmen. Airmen are resilient people. We’re going to get through this.”

The base has returned to life at a pace that didn’t seem possible based on the extent of the damage at first, and that is a testament to the speed at which the Air Force responded and the expertise of the specific airmen that arrived. For example, special tactics airmen had no trouble immediately returning the flightline to operations. RED HORSE airmen from Hurlburt Field, Fla., quickly went to work assessing the facilities, clearing debris, and getting operations going. Base defenders, deployed from Moody AFB, Ga., set out to secure a sprawling facility that didn’t even have a fence line remaining after the storm, Laidlaw said.

“I just let them do what they were trained to do, and here we are, three weeks later, and I couldn’t be more impressed by how much progress we’ve made, and I could not be more proud watching them do what they are trained to do,” he said.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
here's the AirForceMag story (dated 10/31/2018)
Final F-22s Get Ready to Take Off from Tyndall as Base Continues Recovery from Catastrophic Hurricane
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All good, and I can assure you that no roofing girders fell on Raptor's, had that occurred we wouldn't be flying them all out shortly?? There was so much damage and lose debris that it appeared much worse than it was fortunately, some of those aircraft will no doubt require some heavier maintenance, but that's the "best case scenario" and optimism appears to have been "warranted and rewarded", it does help to be a man of Faith, keep praying for my Brother Jim Gents, he started his first round of chemo at 1 today, and is wearing his third bag on a pump at present! and thank you!
 
All good, and I can assure you that no roofing girders fell on Raptor's, had that occurred we wouldn't be flying them all out shortly?? There was so much damage and lose debris that it appeared much worse than it was fortunately, some of those aircraft will no doubt require some heavier maintenance, but that's the "best case scenario" and optimism appears to have been "warranted and rewarded", it does help to be a man of Faith, keep praying for my Brother Jim Gents, he started his first round of chemo at 1 today, and is wearing his third bag on a pump at present! and thank you!
prayers
 
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