• KC-10 supports U.S., Royal Australian Air Force aircraft

    U.S. Air Force KC- 10 Extenders arrived at Brisbane International Airport, Australia, July 12, 2019, to support major air operations for USAF, Royal Australian Air Force and U.S. Navy aircraft operating out of RAAF Base Amberley for Exercise Talisman Sabre 19. 

  • One final flight to honor their own

    A KC-10 Extender and crew assigned to the 6th Air Refueling Squadron with the unique call sign of Brent06 took off early Tuesday morning from Travis AFB on a mission to honor one of their own.

  • 60th AMW now available on USAF Connect app

    The 60th Air Mobility Wing is excited to announce the launch of its sub-app on the USAF Connect mobile application. Team Travis is invited to install the USAF Connect application from the Apple App Store or Google Play and select the “60th Air Mobility Wing” when prompted to add favorites.

  • A busy day on the flight line

    With roughly 3,300 aircraft continuously arriving and departing on a monthly basis, Travis handles more cargo and passenger traffic than any other military air terminal in the United States.

  • 60th LRS gets Travis AFB pumped up for innovation

    As a fuels distribution operator for Travis AFB’s 60th Logistics Readiness Squadron, Senior Airman Tanner O’Laughlin rarely spared a thought on the weather. His job—to ensure quality fuel makes its way into any of the numerous aircraft comprising Travis’ fleet—acted independent of it, and even if it

  • Leadership rounds

    U.S. Air Force Col. Zachery Jiron, 60th Air Mobility Wing vice commander, went to the 60th LRS for Leadership Rounds, a program that allows wing leadership to get a detailed view of their mission at Travis Air Force Base.

  • Salvation Army Kroc students tour Travis 22nd AS

    “Today was special for our 22nd Airlift Squadron team,” said Tech. Sgt. Ryan Padgett, 22nd Airlift Squadron unit technician. “We were able to show and discuss our aircraft (C-5M Super Galaxy) mission.”

  • So much more than just a sky mechanic

    Keeping an aircraft worth hundreds of millions of dollars in tip-top shape is a complex process. Tactical aircraft maintainers are commonly known as "flying crew chiefs" because they're generalists who coordinate the aircraft's readiness and call in specialists like avionics or propulsion