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380AEW Article

Flight engineer reaches 10,000 flight hours

  • Published
  • By Senior Airman Ross M. Tweten
  • 380th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs
A flight engineer with the 380th Air Expeditionary Wing's 908th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron surpassed 10,000 flight hours during a KC-10 Extender mission March 29. 

Senior Master Sgt. Robert Fisher, a St. Petersburg, Fla. native and home stationed out of McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., ended his landmark flight with 10,003 hours. 

"The most difficult part about achieving this milestone is just being around long enough to do it," he chuckled. "It feels excellent to be among such a rarified group of people." 

The 10,000 flight hour community is small and achieving this milestone is all about longevity, he said. Sergeant Fisher has been flying the line since 1986. 

Sergeant Fisher has been in the air as a flight engineer on the C-141 Starlifter and the KC-10 Extender, and has served in Operation Desert Storm and Operations Enduring and Iraqi Freedom. 

"When I first came into the Air Force, there were a lot of 10,000-hour crew members around, and I thought, 'Wow, I'd like to do that,' but as the years went by I felt like I'd never get there because, well, our airplanes fly much faster," he said. "So I figured 5,000 would be nice. Then after I reached that I figured I could probably do about 7,500." 

Sergeant Fisher continued to exceed his goals and reset them. "So, when I passed 8,500 it finally hit me that I was really close to my goal of 10,000, and that maybe I could do this, so here I am." 

According to Lt. Col. Tim White, 908th EARS commander, most flyers accumulate between 3,000 and 5,000 hours in the span of a career. 

"For Sergeant Fisher to eclipse ten thousand hours is a reflection of great dedication to the mission and the art of flying," he said. "If one were to fly around the world for ten thousand hours, he or she would circle the planet over three hundred times, or go back and forth to the moon nine times. Sergeant Fisher is one of the greatest assets in the KC-10 community and his work ethic speaks for itself." 

Sergeant Fisher has had a long bird's-eye view of much of the globe and gives most of that credit to the Air Force. 

"I've been really lucky in my life, in that the Air Force has given me the opportunities to see a lot of really excellent places and travel the world," he said. "When I enlisted in '81 the recruiter said, 'Hey join the Air Force, see the world,' and the Air Force has kept up its end of the bargain on that one." 

"I'd like to say that I've given the Air Force all these wonderful things, but to be honest, the Air Force has given Bob Fisher way more than Bob Fisher has given the Air Force."