The Oklahoma Air Logistics Center, Tinker AFB, Okla., has started work on its first service life extension program F110 engine. It’s a $600 million effort that will make F-16 engines “more reliable and easier to maintain,” Col. Henry Gaudreau, commander of the ALC’s 448th Hawk Propulsion Sustainment Group, tells the Tinker Take Off. SLEP program manager Dana Grilley says the F110 engines that power the F-16 are showing wear and life design issues after more than 20 years of service. The SLEP will replace core engine parts with ones that are more durable and safer for the single-engine aircraft. The plan, adds Gilley, is “not just a piece by piece fix, but a whole engine fix.”
New Air Force PT Uniforms to Hit Shelves in July
May 1, 2024
The Air Force’s new physical training uniforms have been a long time coming. The clothing set was first unveiled in 2021, with a promised 2022 debut. But supply chain issues delayed its arrival multiple times, according to the Air Force. But finally, Airmen are expected to be able to buy…