Master Sgt. Bjorn Woodard, a 119th Civil Engineer Squadron training cadre, red hat, gives directions to Airmen as they rake and mix a quick-drying concrete mixture into a simulated bomb impact crater for repair at the North Dakota Air National Guard Regional Training Site, Fargo, North Dakota, Aug. 11, 2022. The civil engineers are using the Rapid Airfield Damage Recovery (RADR) system for training to repair damage to a 150 feet by 750 feet concrete simulated runway, sectioned off in 20 foot by 20 foot squares for training craters. It is specially designed for making holes in the concrete squa


Master Sgt. Bjorn Woodard, a 119th Civil Engineer Squadron training cadre, red hat, gives directions to Airmen as they rake and mix a quick-drying concrete mixture into a simulated bomb impact crater for repair at the North Dakota Air National Guard Regional Training Site, Fargo, North Dakota, Aug. 11, 2022. The civil engineers are using the Rapid Airfield Damage Recovery (RADR) system for training to repair damage to a 150 feet by 750 feet concrete simulated runway, sectioned off in 20 foot by 20 foot squares for training craters. It is specially designed for making holes in the concrete squares that simulate bomb impact craters that can be repaired with fill and capping material. The Fargo civil engineer training site is one of four in the Air National Guard, and is the first one of those to provide new system for RADR training.


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Photo credit: © Operation 2022 / Alamy / Afripics
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Keywords: 119, ang, ces, ngb, radr, wing