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Crews keep giant C-5M Super Galaxies flying high at Westover Air Reserve Base

United States Air Reserve Tech Sgt. Kevin Godek of Palmer attaches a power supply to a C-5M Super Galaxy. (Don Treeger / The Republican/TNS)
February 15, 2022

Working seven stories above the shop floor and strapped in by cables to the wing of a giant aircraft isn’t in the job description of most people. For Air Force technicians at Westover Air Reserve Base, it’s simply what they do day in and day out.

The C-5M Super Galaxy transport jets that call Westover home have a cargo bay 143 feet long, which is 20-feet longer than the Wright Brothers first flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina in 1903.

United States Air Reserve MSgt. Anthony Botass of Tolland, and Tech Sgt. Joshua Newman of Enfield, work on the aileron of a C-5M (Don Treeger / The Republican/TNS)

The galaxies are used to transport military assets and emergency supplies around the world.

Just like your car, these giants need to come in for service. Fluid leak? Tire change? All of it gets done in the huge pull-through hangar that can house an entire plane.

United States Air Reserve Sr. Airman Alex Lowe of South Windsor, Ct., moves a ladder in the belly of a C-5M Super Galaxy (Don Treeger / The Republican/TNS)

More than two years ago, Westover welcomed their eighth and final upgraded C-5M Super Galaxy to the base. The upgraded planes having engines with 22% more thrust and 20% improved fuel efficiency. The retrofitted planes are also much quieter. The eight aircraft represent a $720 million investment by the Department of Defense.

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