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Aviation Maintenance Management Introduction. IntroductionIntroduction  The Flight Line is a business  Approx 1 billion will travel by end of decade.

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Presentation on theme: "Aviation Maintenance Management Introduction. IntroductionIntroduction  The Flight Line is a business  Approx 1 billion will travel by end of decade."— Presentation transcript:

1 Aviation Maintenance Management Introduction

2 IntroductionIntroduction  The Flight Line is a business  Approx 1 billion will travel by end of decade  Commerce, mail, defense and logistics by air  20% of every revenue dollar is maintenance  Early days one person knew all systems  Today systems very complex and interdependent  Competing priorities and dwindling resources require expert management

3 Aviation Maintenance Management  Early Days of Aviation  Promotion of Flying  Early Evolution of Aircraft Maintenance  Technical Management  Aviation Industry Interaction  Layout of Book  Summary

4 IntroductionIntroduction  Aviation in the Beginning l Today’s aircraft cargo holds are longer & sit higher than the Wright Brother’s first flight  Flight – 120 ft in 12 sec with an altitude of 10ft  747 freighter – 150 ft inside & sits16 ft off the deck

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6 IntroductionIntroduction  Safest Mode of travel l Walking is far more dangerous than flying or driving, per mile traveled: l 0.16 deaths per 100,000,000 miles aboard an airplane. l 1.4 deaths per 100,000,000 miles in a car. l Almost 50 deaths per 100,000,000 miles walked.

7 Which type of flying is safer? Type of Flight Fatalities per million flight hours Airliner (Scheduled and nonscheduled Part 121)4.03 Commuter Airline (Scheduled Part 135)10.74 Commuter Plane (Nonscheduled Part 135 - Air taxi on demand)12.24 General Aviation (Private Part 91)22.43 Sources: NTSB Accidents and Accident Rates by NTSB Classification 1998-2007

8 Odds of being involved in a fatal accident Odds of being on an airline flight which results in at least one fatality Odds of being killed on a single airline flight Top 25 airlines with the best accident rates 1 in 5.4 million Top 25 airlines with the best accident rates 1 in 9.2 million

9 Accidents and Fatalities by Phase of Flight

10 Early days of Aviation  “If God had meant for man to fly He would have given us wings.”  Many early pioneers: l Octave Chanute, Otto Lilienthal, Samuel P. Langley, Glenn Curtiss & Orville & Wilbur Wright l Most intriguing problem was finding a power plant that provided the sufficient power-to-weight ratio for flight l Wright Brothers (recognized as first) both engineers & mechanics  Made 4 flights (Dec. 17, 1903,, Kitty Hawk, NC) 4 th was 59 sec. for over 852 feet.  Designed own engine, propeller, & aerodynamic tables  First maintainers – they melted cement to repair nut holding the propeller shaft sprockets in place

11 Promotion of Flight  First airline in US carried passengers from St. Petersburg to Tampa (Jan – Mar 1914) l Carried only 1 passenger at a time

12 Promotion of Flight  After WWI, airmail service began – if room, a passenger may sit upon the mail  US Gov’t encouraged operators to use bigger planes & carry more passengers so they wouldn’t have to rely on mail contracts to stay in business  Early days – no navigational aids (only roads, railways), could not fly at night unless bonfires lit along the route  By 1929, 10,000 miles of lighted airways, 275 lighted airports, 1352 navigational beacons

13 Promotion of Flight  1927 – 18,679 flew; 1931 – 385,000 flew  After WWII, US fostered the jet age  Aircraft became bigger and flew “higher, faster, and farther”  Nav aids both on ground and in the aircraft and satellites revolutionized the industry  Drastic improvements in aircraft and engine technology  Aviation has come of age l People can fly in comfort and safety

14 Early Aviation Maintenance  No such thing as scheduled maintenance l Spark plug cleaning and occasional oil change  WWI French pilot cut engines to allow him to sweep down and drop bombs l Couldn’t restart because he failed to “burn” the oil off the spark plugs by blipping his ignition switch – forced to land he was captured l The “standard” practice was to land, remove, and clean plugs

15 Early Aviation Maintenance  Wright Brothers favored simple skid landings over wheeled gear (gain in power-to-weight ratio) l Resulted in structural damage (On Condition)  Never performed preflight or post flight tasks l Simple look to see any hanging or items missing l No inspections of the structural elements (dry rot, cracking, corrosion) l Repair or replace as required  Instrumentation was simple – no inspections

16 Early Aviation Maintenance  Modern Approach is more sophisticated  Aircraft are designed for: l Safety l Airworthiness l Maintainability  Detailed Maintenance program is developed with every new model aircraft or derivative

17 Technical Management  Several Disciplines to properly conduct maintenance at an airline: l Maintenance  Hands-on, “nuts and bolts” labor l Engineering  Design, analysis and tech assist to support maintenance work l Management  Organization, Control, and Administration of the maintenance operation

18 Technical Management  Several Disciplines to properly conduct maintenance at an airline: l Production Planning  Planning concepts and organization activity to effectively plan all work l Logistics  Understanding the aircraft inventory scope, realistic, futuristic to meet demand for parts required for successful maintenance operation l Technical Training  Meet all maintenance tech training of personnel

19 Aviation Industry Interaction  Must meet FAA regulations for maintenance before releasing an aircraft for service  Aircraft manufacturers, makers of onboard equipment and systems, airline operators, industry trade associations, regulatory authorities, flight crews, and maintenance personnel l Work together to ensure aviation safety l From the design of the aircraft and its systems, through development of maintenance programs and continues throughout the lifetime of the aircraft

20 Layout of Book  Part 1: Fundamentals of Maintenance l Chapters 1 – 7  Part 2: Technical Services l Chapters 8 – 11  Part 3: Aircraft Management, Maintenance, and Materiel Support l Chapters 12 – 15  Part 4: Oversight Functions: l Chapters 16 – 19  Part 5: Appendixes l Appendix A - F

21 SummarySummary The purpose of aircraft maintenance is to ensure the aircraft will remain airworthy throughout its operational life


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