Maintainers build mount for Fukushima sensors

  • Published
  • By Airman 1st Class Lynsie Nichols
  • 374th Airlift Wing Public Affairs
Since March 11, Airmen all over Yokota Air Base have performed key tasks in support of Japanese relief efforts, but for two Airmen the work took a greater personal significance March 28.
The two Airmen, aircraft structural maintainers with the 374th Maintenance Squadron, worked overtime building a mount designed to carry sensory equipment to monitor radiation levels at the Fukushima power plant.

"The mount will allow us to anchor equipment that will let everyone know what is going on," said Senior Airman Thompson Kongmany, a 374th MXS aircraft structural maintainer.

The Airmen worked tirelessly, knowing that their contribution to Japan's efforts at Fukushima were critical to improved situational awareness and safer operations at the stricken nuclear plant.

On a tight schedule, the two Airmen spent five hours carefully cutting and shaping metal sheets as they created the mount with exacting detail.

"Precision is key," Kongmany said, "We want to make sure that everything is just right; no sharp edges and a perfect fit."

This is not the first time 374th MXS Airmen have put their metal-fabrication expertise to good use in support of Japanese emergency responders at Fukushima.

Earlier in the week, two teams of four Airmen worked 12-hour shifts to design and fabricate critical connection components, so Japanese crews could use water pumps, donated by the U.S. government, to augment the Fukushima nuclear plant's cooling system.

Despite long hours and demanding requirements, the Airmen of the 374th MXS said they feel honored to have such an important role in Operation Tomodachi, and to be a part of history.

"It feels great to be able to help people out in a time of need," said Airman Mark Williams, a 374th MXS structural aircraft maintainer.

"When this is all said and done, I think it will really sink in, what a significant part we are playing in history," Kongmany said.