Shemya’s first
metrology (pmel) lab
(Post-WWII)
On the 21st of January 1975 MSgt. Malcom Smith
arrived on Shemya to head up the first operational
Metrology Lab (Precision Measurement Equipment
Lab, or PMEL) providing calibration, repair, and
technical support services for the island’s expanding
roles and missions. MSgt. Smith was the first of ten
individuals selected to perform in this capacity. The
last of the technicians arrived on the 15th of July, 1975,
thus completing manning requirements established
for the lab, including nine PMEL technicians and one
scheduler.
The lab was responsible for supporting and imparting
our nation’s measurement standards to any and all of
the island’s major electronic systems, scales, meters,
gauges, or simply put…to ensure the accuracy of any
device used to measure anything.
The lab originally opened up in an old, small, wooden
structure having survived WWII. The equipment was
set up on workbenches built from saw horses and
planks. The heart of the lab, the actual equipment
used to impart measurement standards to customer’s
equipment, came to the island in the form of a
Metrology Package referred to as the Transportable
Field Calibration Unit, or simply, the “TFCU.”
Examples of TFCU setups at diverse locations…Korea and Italy.
We made do under these somewhat primitive
conditions for several months…that is…until the REAL
lab opened as a side building attached to the Cobra
Dane facility. Coinciding with the move to the new Lab,
crates of Lab equipment arrived from another lab (I
believe Thailand) that had just closed down.
As we opened the crates, we discovered that our
standard Aerosmith A1 Barometer, having a mercury-
filled container attached, had broken en route and
leaked the mercury inside the crate. Not a good way to
start the day! Within a day or two we had all the
standards set up and ready to go…and we had REAL
workbenches to work on!
George L. Smith, Shemya PMEL, 1975
We made the rounds across the island…from the post
office scales to the Air Terminal’s scales…dragging a
very heavy box of calibrated standard weights with us.
Many of the scales were no longer accurate, with some
having to be scrapped and replaced. Other than for
these events, all of our work took place in the
Lab…with one or two excursions to the Cobra Dane
facility to help them with their test equipment (an S-
Parameter Test Set in one case as I recall).
Each workday morning, after listening to the latest
episode of “Chicken Man” (more) on Shemya’s AFRT
Radio, we would all assemble in the chow hall as a
group to discuss how Chicken Man would escape his
latest dilemma (“Weeeellll Folks!”), and to ponder over
the day’s events to come. We would be well-nourished;
a breakfast consisting of two slices of toast smothered
with an abundance of SOS sauce, a half-dozen or so
slices of bacon, potatoes if available lavished across
any empty spot on the plate, and a 3-egg omelet
covering all the above. Somehow…at the end of the
tour…we hadn’t (thankfully) gained much, if any,
weight!
MSgt. Malcom Smith, to commemorate the occasion of
having established a new PMEL, bought and paid for a
plaque having inscribed all the names of those lucky
folks who participated in this auspicious occasion, and
hung it on one of the walls in the lab. The plaque’s
inscription is as follows:
(Click HERE For Photo Of Actual Plaque)
THE PMEL WAS ORGANIZED AND
PUT INTO
OPERATION BY THE FOLLOWING
PERSONNEL:
___________________________
SMITH, MALCOM A. MSGT
21 JANUARY 1975
TYLER, JAMES C. TSGT
15 FEBRUARY 1975
AHNER, DENNIS E. SSGT
28 FEBRUARY 1975
SEGEBARTH, MICHAEL P. SSGT
10 MARCH 1975
WADE, DOUGLAS L. SGT
10 MARCH 1975
ALVIS, DAVID L. SGT
8 APRIL 1975
RIEGEL, GEORGE W. MSGT
11 APRIL 1975
SMITH, GEORGE L. TSGT
15 APR 1975
RICHARDSON, EDDIE W. SSGT
3 JUNE 1975
GRASSO, ROBERT A. SGT
15 JULY 1975
2 SEPTEMBER 1975
THE CREW
Scott Miller provided information regarding the
PMEL closure on Shemya. Shemya as an Air Force
Base was officially closed in 1995 as a result of BRAC
Commission's recommendations. The PMEL was
shut down sometime before base closure. It took
Scott and the rest of the PMEL crew two months to
shut down the lab, packing equipment and sorting
out boxes of standards and tools to be shipped back
to CONUS returning them to the supply chain.
Civilian Cobra Dane contractors took a good portion
of the PMEL's bench stock for their maintenance
efforts. Scott was one of the last few USAF
personnel to leave the Island, with some still
working the 'Dane. When Scott left the island the
SPs still had a presence, however the Composite
Building, Bldg. 600, was empty.
Current Update: 07/22/2022 08:35