The B-2 Spirit of Florida, stationed at Whiteman AFB, Mo., became the first B-2 to reach 7,000 flight hours, according to a base release. The aircraft hit the milestone during a mission on April 1, according to Whiteman’s April 4 release. “This achievement is a testament to the men and women” of Whiteman’s 509th Bomb Wing and the Air National Guard’s 131st BW “who take a vested interest in the B-2 mission every day,” said Lt. Col. Michael Pyburn, commander of the 131st Operations Group. There are 20 B-2s in the Air Force’s inventory. “We take a lot of pride in keeping our B-2s airworthy,” said SSgt. Ken Sedgwick, a crew chief with the 13th Aircraft Maintenance Unit. He noted that Spirit of Florida was also the first B-2 to reach the 5,000-hour mark in May 2007 and then the 6,000-hour mark in January 2010. A few days prior to the 7,000-hour milestone, two B-2s from Whiteman flew more than 6,500 miles to South Korea to drop inert bombs at a training range. (Whiteman report by SrA. Brigitte N. Brantley)
The Space Force relies entirely on data—but it lacks the systems and tools to analyze and share that data properly even within the service, let alone with international partners, officials said May 1.