57e4d64a5ae56 1317890 Sample
57e4d64a5ae56 1317890 Sample
57e4d64a5ae56 1317890 Sample
ISBN 978-1945825-99-6
This book has been published with all efforts taken to make the material error-free after the
consent of the author. However, the author and the publisher do not assume and hereby disclaim
any liability to any party for any loss, damage, or disruption caused by errors or omissions, whether
such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident, or any other cause.
No part of this book may be used, reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission
from the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Contents
Preface ix
Abstract xi
Conclusion 25
Conclusion 61
vi
Contents
Conclusion 84
Conclusion 113
vii
Contents
Conclusion 148
Bibliography 149
List of Abbreviations 155
viii
Chapter 1
1.0. INTRODUCTION
Maintenance of aircraft is a comprehensive, on-going process. The entire aircraft needs
to be examined, maintained, and have the necessary parts replaced to uphold the safety
standards mandated by the Federal Aviation Administration. Aircraft are required to be
maintained after a certain period of calendar time or flight hours or flight cycles.
This chapter will deal with some of the routine maintenance tasks performed by an
Aircraft Maintenance Team including cleaning aircraft and components, application
of corrosion prevention compound, lubricating parts, draining and troubleshooting
fuel systems, checking and servicing hydraulic and pneumatic systems, replacing
components, inspecting for general wear and tear.
Aircraft maintenance is a newer field of working in avionics, which deals with
electronic systems. These parts are vital for navigation and communications, and
include radar, instruments, computer systems, radio communications, and global
position systems (GPS).A strong knowledge of wiring and technical skills is required for
working in avionics maintenance.
iii. Regulatory Requirements: The condition and the maintenance of aircraft are
regulated by the aviation authorities of the jurisdiction in which the aircraft is
registered.
Such requirements establish standards for repair, periodic overhauls, and alteration
by requiring that the owner or operator establish an airworthiness maintenance and
inspection program to be carried out by certified individuals qualified to issue an
airworthiness certificate (Civil aviation department Hong Kong, 2014).
Historically in the early days of aviation, owners and engineers concerning with
in-flight failures and component reliability developed maintenance Schedules to help
prevent costly occurrences. As aviation grew and scheduled air transport arrived,
safety, reliability and economics became important in order to attract passengers. It
became apparent that to achieve a controlled balance between safety and economics,
Regulatory Authorities needed to ensure minimum standards were maintained and a
level playing field existed for fair competition between operators.
What to maintain, when to maintain and how to maintain, are the keys to the
content of the Maintenance Schedules and a system was developed for Operators,
Manufacturers and Regulators to share experience and knowledge on these very issues
for new aircraft being developed. Some Commercial Air Transport operators may choose
to maintain their aircraft in accordance with a Maintenance Programme. This is a ‘real
time system’ which consists of a Maintenance Schedule and a whole group of review
and management procedures to ensure that it remains realistic and effective.
design-in level of perfection will not be permanent. Some components will deteriorate
from the use and some will deteriorate from lack of use. Misuse by operator or user may
also cause some premature deterioration or degradation of the system or even out right
damage .This deterioration or degradation of the system represents an increase in total
entropy of the system .Therefore, while the engineer’s job is to minimize the entropy
of the system during design, the mechanic’s job is to combat the natural, continual
increase in the entropy of the system during its operational lifetime.
It is the engineer’s responsibility to design the system which as high a degree of
perfection as possible within reasonable limits. The mechanic responsibility, on the
other hand, is to combat the continual increase in entropy during the operational
lifetime of the equipment.
ii. Redesign
The system can be designed to higher level of perfection that is a higher level of
reliability with a corresponding decrease in total entropy. During this redesign, new
components, new materials, or new techniques may have been used to reduce the
natural entropy of the system. In some cases a reduction in man-made entropy may
result because the designer applied tighter tolerances attained improved design
skills or changed the design philosophy.
Although the designers have reduced entropy of the system, the system will
deteriorate. It is quite possible that the rate of deterioration will change from the
origin design depending upon numerous factors, thus, the slope of the curve
may increase, decrease or stay the same. Whichever is the case the maintenance
requirements of the system could be affected in some way. At a given point in time,
a component or system is either functioning or it has failed, and that the component
or system operating state changes as time evolves. A working component or system
will eventually fail. The failed state will continue forever, if the component or system
is non-repairable. A repairable component or system will remain in the failed state
for a period of time while it is being repaired and then transcends back to the
functioning state when the repair is completed.
This transition is assumed to be instantaneous. The change from a functioning
to a failed state is failure while the change from a failure to a functioning state is
referred to as repair. It is also assumed that repairs bring the component or system
back to an “as good as new” condition. This cycle continues with the repair-to failure
and the failure-to-repair process; and then, repeats over and over for a repairable
system.
iii. Failure Rate Patterns
There are three patterns of failures for non-repairable items, which can change with
time. The failure rate or hazard rate may be decreasing, increasing or constant.
a. Decreasing Failure Rate or Non-repairable Items
A decreasing failure rate (DFR) can be caused by an item, which becomes less
likely to fail as the survival time increases; this is demonstrated by electronic
equipment during their early life or the burn-in period. This is demonstrated
by the first half of the traditional bath tub curve for electronic components or
equipment where failure rate is decreasing during the early life period.
b. Constant Failure Rate or Non-repairable Items
A constant failure rate (CFR) can be caused by the application of loads at a
constant average rate in excess of the design specifications or strength. These
are typically externally induced failures.
c. Increasing Failure Rate or Non-repairable Items
An increasing failure rate (IFR) can be caused by material fatigue or by strength
deterioration due to cyclic loading. Its failure mode does not accrue for a finite
time, and then exhibits an increasing probability of occurrence.
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Basics of Aircraft Maintenance Management
require that an operator must have a maintenance program adequate to perform the
work and qualified competent persons to certify the maintenance and to monitor
performance.
Terminologies
i. Airworthiness: A condition in which the aircraft, airframe, engine, propeller,
accessories, and components meet their type design and are in a condition for safe
operation.
ii. Inspection: The routine performance of inspection tasks at prescribed intervals.
The inspection must ensure the airworthiness of an aircraft, up to and including its
overhaul or life-limits.
iii. Scheduled (routine) maintenance: The performance of maintenance tasks at
prescribed intervals.
iv. Unscheduled (Non-routine) Maintenance: The performance of maintenance tasks
when mechanical irregularities occur. These irregularities are categorized as to
whether or not they occur during flight time.
v. Structural Inspection: A detailed inspection of the airframe structure that may
require special inspection techniques to determine the continuous integrity of the
airframe and its related parts.
vi. Program Requirements: Basic requirements of a maintenance program which will,
include the following:
1. Inspection
2. Scheduled Maintenance
3. Unscheduled Maintenance
4. Overhaul and Repair
5. Structural Inspection
vii. Manuals: Instructions and standards for unscheduled maintenance should be in the
operator or applicant’s technical manuals. The manuals must contain procedures to
be followed when using these manuals and recording scheduled and unscheduled
maintenance.
viii.Approval: Maintenance programs are approved by issue of ‘operations specifications’
or by direct approval of the Maintenance program document. The approved
document should describe the scope of the program and reference manuals and
other technical data. Details of the program must also be included in the operator/
applicant’s manual.
ix. Operator or Applicant’s Organization: The operator/applicant must have an
organization adequate to carry out the provisions of the maintenance program. If
the work is to be performed outside of the operator/applicant’s organization, the
contractor must meet the same requirements. In determining the adequacy of the
organization, the following must be considered:
1. The complexity of the organization
2. The aircraft
3. The experience of the personnel
4. The number of personnel
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Fundamentals of Aircraft Maintenance Management
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Fundamentals of Aircraft Maintenance Management
MSG analysis procedures must be used for the development of routine scheduled
maintenance tasks for all new or derivative aircraft. It is the only methodology
accepted by the airworthiness authorities. MSG-3 has also been adopted by most
major business jet manufacturers, with the encouragement of the National Business
Aviation Association (NBAA).
Drawbacks of MGS-2
i. Does not take the economic view into the considerations. Simply maintains
aircraft safety at any cost
ii. Does not treat hidden failures to pilots: electric and electronic failures, fatigue
inside the structure, etc.
iii. Is a bottom-up approach requiring more staff
iv. The definitions in MSG-2 contradicts themselves
v. Does not take the modern corrosion prevention approach into account
Advantages of MSG-3
i. Top-down process
ii. Reduced maintenance costs
iii. Fewer maintenance tasks
iv. Some tasks are carried out for economic reasons and others for safety reasons
v. Eliminates emotions
d. Process Oriented Maintenance
The process oriented maintenance is developed for aviation using decision logic
procedures developed by air transport association of America. The maintenance
steering group (MSG-2) process is bottom up approach whereby each unit (system,
component or appliance) on the aircraft is analysed and assigned to one of the
primary maintenance processes, Hard Time, On-condition or Condition monitoring.
In general, hard time means the removal of an item at predetermined interval
usually specified in either so many flight hours or so many flight cycles. In some
cases the hard time interval may be in calendar time. On-condition means that
the item will be checked at specified intervals (in hours, cycle or calendar time) to
determine its remaining serviceability. Condition monitoring involves the monitoring
of failure rates, removal rates, etc. to facilitate maintenance program. (Harry A.
Kinnson, 2012).
The three oriented maintenance processes are discussed below in detail:
1. On-condition maintenance
“On-condition” means fit and forget, or don’t do anything until a failure occurs.
The above interpretations of “on-condition” maintenance may cause operational
surprises, which could not only prove very costly, but also jeopardise the safety
of an aircraft and its occupants.
The majority of aircraft mechanical components do not fail abruptly, but give
some warning or sign of the fact that they are about to fail. These warnings
or signs are called Potential Failures, and are defined as identifiable physical
conditions which indicate that a functional failure is about to occur or is in the
process of occurring. The amount of warning given by different potential failures
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Basics of Aircraft Maintenance Management
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such as mean time between failures. But it is the working group members who do
the detailed analysis and generate proposed scheduled maintenance tasks. The
working group member’s representatives of the manufacturer and operators present
their results to the ISC, which approves it. Representatives of the regulators attend
industry steering committee ISC meetings as advisers.
The final output of the ISC for a new aircraft is the Maintenance Review Board
Report (MRBR), which outlines the recommended minimum initial maintenance
requirements. This document is then approved by the FAA, as the MRB chairman
for a U.S. aircraft.
Although there is no actual in-service operational data available when the ISC
process begins for a new aircraft, there is much historical data on the performance
of similar components and systems used in earlier designs, as well as test data
from the manufacturer and component vendors. “It’s the actual in-service reliability
data of similar components and systems that drives the interval,” according to Ray
Smith, a Boeing technical principal and the co-chairman of the 787 ISC.
MSG-3 stresses a top-down approach to analysis that starts at the highest
manageable level and looks at the consequences of that failure, explains Dave
Nakata, vice president of Empower MX, an MSG-3 consulting service.
If MSG-3 analysis shows that a certain functional failure would jeopardize
operational safety, and couldn’t be rectified by any of the hierarchy of standard
tasks within the specified logic, then redesign of the item in question would be
mandatory. Application of MSG-3 logic to the emerging Boeing 787-8 aircraft, for
example, has led to mandatory design changes in flight control and lightning/
High-Intensity Radiated Field (HIRF) protection systems, Smith, Boeing technical
principal and the co-chairman of the 787 ISC said.
MSG-3 is the only game in town for commercial airplane manufacturers. According
to Advisory Circular AC-121-22A, FAA policy states that the “latest MSG analysis
procedures must be used for the development of MRBRs for all new or derivative
aircraft.” It is the “only methodology accepted by the airworthiness authorities,”
states JörgCoelius, section manager for maintenance programs with Lufthansa
Technik. Although Maintenance Repair and Overhaul (MROs) are executors rather
than decision makers in the MSG-3 community, LHT is knowledgeable. It helped
develop MSG-3-based maintenance programs for Southwest Airlines, Alaska Airlines
and Lufthansa.
FAA stresses the safety aspects of MSG-3. The methodology helps improve
safety by addressing hidden functional failures. “Maintenance-significant items are
addressed at the system level instead of at the parts level.” MSG-3 also helps improve
maintenance efficiency, FAA notes, by eliminating redundant and ineffective tasks.
There is usually a substantial cost reduction in hard time component removal and
replacement.
The agency also praised MSG-3’s thoroughness. The methodology focuses on
aircraft systems and the loss of system function s, FAA said.
i. It considers hidden failures, plus one additional failure, in the decision logic,
identifies three consequences of a loss of function (safety, operational, and
economic),
ii. Identifies safety tasks,
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Basics of Aircraft Maintenance Management
into five categories, depending on whether the functional failure is evident to the
flight crew. These are:
i. evident safety,
ii. evident operational,
iii. evident economic,
iv. hidden safety and
v. hidden non-safety. The tasks resulting from the evident safety and hidden safety
categories are the most critical ones.
f. Maintenance Program Documents
The MRB Report outlines the initial minimum scheduled maintenance/inspection
requirements to be used in the development of an approved continuous airworthiness
maintenance program. The Maintenance Planning Document (MPD) document
contains all the MRB requirements plus mandatory scheduled maintenance
requirements that may only be changed with the permission of the applicable
airworthiness authority. These supplemental inspection tasks are detailed in
the aircraft’s Certification Maintenance Requirement (CMR) and Airworthiness
Limitation (AWL) documents.
i. Certification Maintenance Requirements (CMR)
A CMR is a required periodic task established during the design certification
of the airplane as an operating limitation of the Type Certificate (TC). CMRs
usually result from a formal, numerical analysis conducted to show compliance
with catastrophic and hazardous failure conditions. A CMR is intended to detect
safety significant latent failures that would, in combination with one or more
other specific failures or events, result in a hazardous or catastrophic failure
condition. Example of a CMR task is performing a visual inspection of the elevator
tab rods and mechanism every 2,000 flight cycles.
ii. Airworthiness Limitations (AWL)
They are regulatory approved means of introducing inspections or maintenance
practices to prevent problems with certain systems. Mandatory replacement
times, inspection intervals and related inspection procedures for structural safe-
life parts are included in the AWL document, and are required by the regulatory
authorities as part of the Instructions for Continued Airworthiness.
iii. Operators Approved Maintenance Program
The Maintenance Program Documents (MPD) scheduled maintenance tasks
should not be considered as all-inclusive. Each individual airline has final
responsibility to decide what to do and when to do it, except for those maintenance
requirements identified as “Airworthiness Limitations” (AL) or “Certification
Maintenance Requirements” (CMR).
Additional requirements in the form of Service Letters, Service Bulletins
and Airworthiness Directives are the responsibility of the individual airline
to incorporate. Maintenance tasks recommended in engine, APU, and vendor
manuals should also be considered the most common requirements that make
up an Operator’s Approved Maintenance Program (OAMP).
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Fundamentals of Aircraft Maintenance Management
3. To improve Quality
Aircraft parts must be manufactured by factories, which are officially approved by the
civil aviation organization of the state. Also, inspection, repair, altering, or overhauls
of aircraft parts must performed by an approved factory. The worldwide-accredited
auditors are the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the European Aviation
Safety Agency (EASA). The Department of Civil Aviation (DCA) of Thailand is also
an approved auditor for repairing factories, which are located in Thailand. On the
other hand, the quality of aircraft maintenance is related to approval organization.
Airlines trust FAA/EASA-certified repair stations as top quality and DCA-certified
repair station as lower quality. However, both FAA/EASA and DCA are acceptable
as explained in ICAO annex 6. Thus, aircraft maintenance improves its quality
under degradation.
4. To maintain Reliability
Langford explained the meaning of reliability as “the probability that a system
will perform its intended function for a specified interval under stated conditions”
and expressed as an equation as follows: where = probability that the system
will successfully perform as required over the interval of time. The longer mean
time between failures (MTBF) results in higher reliability. In order to increase
aircraft reliability, maintenance managers must reduce aircraft downtime due to
maintenance, which is related to aircraft-part-procurement lead time and repairing
time.
The failure rate dictates the frequency of unscheduled corrective maintenance or
repair of a system affected by random malfunction. Low reliability indicates frequent
failures, which trigger more frequent corrective maintenance. Consequently, the
reliability can be improved by enhancing maintenance support in forms of facilities,
skilled technicians, tools, and supporting stocks of spare components, and repair
parts. Increased system reliability based on high-quality components can greatly
extend the intervals of operation between failures and eliminate or minimize
corrective maintenance support requirements.
5. To ensure Maintainability
The maintainability measures ability of a system to be restored to a specified level
of operational readiness within defined intervals with the use of the aforementioned
facility, and equipment resources. The maintainability is related to scheduled and
unscheduled maintenance. Maintainability refers to ease and speed at which any
maintenance activity can be carried out on any equipment. Maintenance can be
measured by mean time to repair (MTTR). It is a function of equipment design, and
maintenance task design including use of appropriate tools, jigs, work platforms,
and so forth. Once a piece of equipment has failed, it must be possible to get it back
into an operating condition as soon as possible.
6. To ensure aircrafts Availability
Availability measures the readiness of a system to fulfil its assigned function.
Airlines try to obtain high utilization to maximize their income. The aircraft must
be available before next scheduled flight; otherwise, the flight delay may be costly.
Maintenance managers must predict unforeseen troubles and pre plan materials,
skilled technicians, and facilities. They seek possible solutions for minimizing
aircraft-maintenance times which results in maximized availability. Thus, aircraft
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availability relates to flight hours per period. Higher flight hours (lower ground time)
results in higher availability.
7. To realize Flexibility/Replace Ability
Operation managers frequently experience problems of material shortage or
malfunction of equipment. Flexibility is an ability of production plant or service
provider by which he switches the planned operation to another process or solution
to meet the customer expectation. Supply chain flexibility is an ability to reconfigure
the supply chain and alter the supply of product in line with customer demand. It
is composed of two dimensions:
a. Resource flexibility which refers to a resource that can be applied to a range
of alternative uses with low costs and low difficulties are associated with the
switching from one resource to another as well as a short time is required for the
switch,
b. Coordination flexibility is a flexibility of process that redefines product strategies
in reconfiguring the chain of resources to produce the product, and re-deploy
those resources needed to produce the product.
expensive. If the regulatory authority agrees with the rationale for choosing STC,
the STC is granted.
The type certificate (TC) implies that aircraft manufactured according to the
approved design can be issued an Airworthiness Certificate. Examples of regulatory
authorities are the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), the Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) and the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA). To meet those requirements
the aircraft and each sub-assembly must also be approved. For example, in the U.S.
these sub-assemblies must meet requirements in the applicable Technical Standard
Order (TSO). To meet those requirements the design documents are examined for
compliance with the applicable Minimum Operating Performance Standards (MOPS)
applicable to that sub-assembly. MOPS are published by RTCA, Inc. When aircraft
are produced to meet a given TC, each one need not be tested as rigorously but the
confidence demonstrated by the Type Certificate is conferred, when the aircraft has
been assigned an Airworthiness Certificate.
2. Operator’s Certificate
An air operator’s certificate (AOC) is the approval granted by a national aviation
authority (NAA) to an aircraft operator to allow it to use aircraft for commercial
purposes. This requires the operator to have personnel, assets and system in place
to ensure the safety of its employees and the general public. The certificate will
list the aircraft types and registrations to be used, for what purpose and in what
specific area at airports or geographic region.
The requirements for obtaining an AOC vary from country to country, but are
generally defined as:
a. Sufficient personnel with the required experience for the type of operations
requested,
b. Airworthy aircraft, suitable for the type of operations requested,
c. Acceptable systems for the training of crew and the operation of the aircraft
(Operations Manual)
d. A quality system to ensure that all applicable regulations are followed,
e. The appointment of key accountable staff, who are responsible for specific safety
critical functions such as training, maintenance and operations,
f. Carriers Liability Insurance for Airlines: Operators are to have sufficient insurance
to cover the injury or death of any passenger carried
g. Proof that the operator has sufficient finances to fund the operation
h. The operator has sufficient ground infrastructure, or arrangements for the supply
of sufficient infrastructure, to support its operations into the ports requested.
i. The certificate is held by a legal person who resides in the country or region of
application for European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA).
As an AOC shows the acceptance of the relevant NNA of the operators personnel,
infrastructure and procedures, it holds value. In most jurisdictions an AOC may
be sold or acquired to prevent the arduous process of gaining regulator acceptance
for a new AOC. This can allow failed airlines to be sold as a going concern and then
more easily changed into another business. This has occurred with FLYi airline’s
AOC being bought by Northwest Airlines to start Compass Airlines, now a feeder
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Basics of Aircraft Maintenance Management
airline for Delta Air Lines marketed as Delta Connection, and also with Strategic
Airlines purchasing the AOC, staff and routes of the failed OzJet airlines.
According to the United States Department of Transportation, the Federal
Aviation Administration is to maintain an airline air carriers operating certificate in
the category of fitness an air carrier must maintain the following three standards:
adequate financing, competent management, a willingness to comply with applicable
laws, and regulations which include at least 75 % of airlines controlling voting
equity must be held by US citizens.
3. A Certificate of Airworthiness
A Certificate of Airworthiness or an airworthiness certificate is issued for an aircraft
by the national aviation authority in the state in which the aircraft is registered.
The airworthiness certificate attests that the aircraft is airworthy insofar as the
aircraft conforms to its type design. Each airworthiness certificate is issued in one
of a number of different categories. A certificate of airworthiness is issued when
the aircraft is registered in the name of the owner. Thereafter, a yearly currency
fee is payable to renew the Certificate of Airworthiness. If this fee is not paid when
due, the certificate expires and the owner must apply again for this certificate to
be issued, the Certificate of Airworthiness can only be issued when a certificate of
release to service from the maintenance facility declares that the maintenance due
has been carried out and the aircraft is then certified as being airworthy. In the USA,
Australia and some other countries, each airworthiness certificate is classified as
either a Standard Airworthiness Certificate or a Special Airworthiness Certificate.
A standard airworthiness certificate is an airworthiness certificate issued for
an aircraft by the national aviation authority in the state in which the aircraft
is registered. A standard airworthiness certificate is one of the certificates that
are mandatory if an aircraft is to be used in commercial operations. In the USA,
Australia and some other countries, a standard airworthiness certificate is issued
in one of the following categories.
4. Production Certificate
A production certificate refers to an approval document issued by the Federal
Aviation Administration to manufacture duplicate aircraft products.
The administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration issues a production
certificate authorizing the production of a duplicate of an aircraft, aircraft engine,
propeller, or appliance for which a type certificate has been issued when the
administrator finds the duplicate will conform to the certificate. On receiving an
application, the administrator inspects, and requires testing of a duplicate to
ensure that it conforms to the requirements of the certificate. The administrator
can include in a production certificate terms required in the interest of safety.
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Fundamentals of Aircraft Maintenance Management
FAA will discontinue its conformity and airworthiness inspections after 6 months from
the date the type certificate was issued.
Delivery Inspection
For the operator and owner of a new aircraft, it is very important that the aircraft is
inspected and checked during the assembly and acceptance phases.
SR Technics offers delivery inspection on the final assembly line, as well as at the
delivery centre. Services consist of all inspections from the start of assembly up to
delivery to the owner and operator, and include:
a. Monitoring and review of all production documentation, customer quality
logbooks and aircraft inspection reports
b. Preparation and review of all documentation required to start the customer
acceptance checks at the delivery centre
c. Close cooperation with the customer and liaison with the manufacturer’s delivery
team during all stages of aircraft acceptance
d. Daily review of technical and quality log books to ensure that the critical path is
adhered to during the delivery phase
e. Liaison with delivery-, quality-, test flight- and customer inspection managers, as
well as ferry flight coordinators, to ensure smooth and on time delivery
Certification of Personnel
Personnel certification regulations have been grouped in two categories, flight
crewmembers and other than flight crewmembers. The category of “other than flight
crew members” includes mechanics, control tower operators, and parachute riggers.
From the beginning of the current activities to revise the mechanic portion of the rule, it
has been the contention of all parties concerned, including the FAA, that maintenance
personnel should have a separate, standalone rule. In the current environment of
complex and constantly evolving aviation technology, it is necessary to have a dedicated
rule that focuses solely on the maintenance personnel that serve the aviation industry.
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Basics of Aircraft Maintenance Management
Conclusion
Proper aircraft maintenance is essential for keeping aircraft and aircraft parts in optimal
condition, and ensuring the safety of pilots, crew, and passengers. Airline and airport
industry should keep Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) setups for smooth flow
of flight operations and for the sake of running the operations profitably at minimum
cost of maintenance.
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