Attention! This news was published on the old version of the website. There may be some problems with news display in specific browser versions.

Unsung Heroes – The Maintainers

Course Photo of mechanics of 18 Flight, 3 Wing - August 1942

Aviation history is littered with examples of outstanding achievements occurring through the ability to adapt, improvise and overcome. However, it is a hard and fast rule that aviation cannot take place safely and efficiently without skilled ground crews and maintainers. Often the unsung heroes of any nation’s aviation community, ground crews have worked tirelessly and resolutely in the face of a multitude of dangers: whether it be within earshot of tank battles on the Eastern Front, under constant fire and bombardment from enemy aircraft in the sands of North Africa or in the cramped confines of an escort carrier’s hangar in an overnight storm in the seas of the Arctic. Whilst ‘ground crew’ is a very broad term and covers a multitude of vital tasks, the purpose of this article is to concentrate on mechanics and maintainers.

Ground crews of the USAAF 15th Air Force at work on a P51 in Italy.

All aircraft need regular maintenance; the practices in place in the modern day military aviation environment have many striking similarities to the procedures already implemented by the time of the Second World War. Even if undamaged by the enemy, aircraft parts are ‘life-exed’: depending on the aircraft and the individual parts, certain components will be replaced after flying a certain number of hours. In addition to this, aircraft have a scheduled maintenance package. For example, a specific aircraft may be pulled from flying every 25 or 30 hours for a series of checks; a more detailed examination taking more time may occur every 100 flying hours. Only under the most extreme conditions would these maintenance procedures be neglected and even then, unless the airfield was under immediate attack, paperwork would be required to forego the normal routines.

Even more regular than this was Before and After Flight maintenance; every morning and every evening, every aircraft would be thoroughly checked in accordance with a detailed check list by ground crews. These procedures also had periodicities; if an aircraft was checked first thing in the morning but did not fly that day, the rules would specify how many days the Before Flight check was valid until another, fresh check needed to be carried out. One key difference between modern day aviation and that of the Second World War was the pilot’s pre-flight walk around. Today, a pilot has his own set of checks which are detailed and need to be carried out prior to him even switching on the aircraft’s power. For some nations during the Second World War, such a detailed walk around would have been considered insulting to the ground crews.

Fleet Air Arm and RAF mechanics

at work on a Swordfish aboard

HMS Ark Royal, pre-war

The most important piece of maintenance documentation for any individual British military aircraft was, and is still today, known as the Form 700. Whilst this may indeed have begun life as a single form, by the time of the Second World War each individual aircraft’s Form 700 was a thick binder consisting of dozens of pages. It detailed the aircraft’s servicing history, hours remaining on life-exed parts, records of oil consumption to pick up on trends, times and dates of scheduled and unscheduled servicing and many other vital facts. It was with this document that the pilot would sign the aircraft out under his charge before every flight, and then sign it back across to the paternal care of the maintenance organization, often with a stern rebuke from a Watch Chief or Senior NCO for damaging ‘his’ aircraft.

In terms of recruitment and training, ground crews varied as much nation by nation as any other branch of the armed forces. Beginning with the British Royal Navy’s Fleet Air Arm as an example, the RN used a two-tier approach for mechanics across all specialisations of the navy, and the Fleet Air Arm was no exception. The bulk of personnel were made up by the Naval Air Mechanic branch, whilst a higher level of qualification was provided by the Artificer branch.