_Overhaul & Maintenance

Elyse Moody
Ascent Aviation Services in Tucson added John “Jack” Keating as VP operations and director of maintenance and Michael Melvin as controller. Keating most recently was president of Evergreen Maintenance Center; Melvin also joins Ascent from Evergreen, where he served as CFO. At the same time, Ascent realigned internally, shifting Richard “Rick” Dupuy from director of maintenance to director of quality and Charles Stead from director of quality and planning to director of planning.

Bill Burchell (LONDON)
The latest safety statistics released in January by UK-based consultancy Ascend qualify 2009 as “the safest year ever” for airline operations in terms of the number of fatal accidents. That said, high fatalities in several severe accidents pushed the number of passengers and crew killed in 2009 to 732, up 29.1% compared to 567 in 2008.

By Bill Burchell
Few places around the world have seen their economies grow as fast as the Persian Gulf states of the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, which over recent years have become an aviation powerhouse. On that journey, these countries have rapidly established fast-growing airlines and now are building airports, aerospace manufacturing and MRO industries to support their burgeoning fleets.

Kerry Lynch
Continental Airlines to install Diamond seats in 50J/226Y configuration on Boeing 777-200 series aircraft, STC ST09682AC-D

Elyse Moody
EVA Air and Thales inked a five-year, repair-by-the-hour contract for avionics services and support of the Taiwanese carrier’s fleet of 11 Airbus A330 aircraft. Thales will ensure the maintenance of the components from its Singapore regional service center.

Kerry Lynch
FAA faces the daunting task of writing a Safety Management System (SMS) regulation that will accommodate the various aspects of industry yet provide a clear, consistent standard for operators. The complexity of writing SMS regulations is evident in industry comments on a potential rulemaking, with some organizations urging FAA to move forward expeditiously and others questioning whether FAA can legally issue a comprehensive, “unbound” proposal.

Heather Baldwin
When Michael Williams, a professor of business at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (ERAU), first joined the aviation business several decades ago, computers were “unheard of,” he recalls. Today, however, an understanding of technology and computer programs is an essential capability of every maintenance manager. “Being able to use maintenance planning software, scheduling software, being able to communicate electronically—these [skills] are needed more than anything today,” he says.

Kerry Lynch
Aviation Specialties Unlimited amended STC to install a supplemental light system on Eurocopter Canada BO 105 LS A-3 and Eurocopter Deutschland BO-105C and BO-105S helicopters, STC SR01546SE

Elyse Moody
Lockheed Martin affiliate Kelly Aviation Center in San Antonio earned AS9110 certification in December.

Bruce Langsen
One of the many things I’ve learned from presiding over a technology-based services company for the past 14-years is that if you are to not only survive but to grow, you need to constantly evaluate how fast to develop and deploy new applications and capabilities. Said another way, it’s really about how fast the market will adapt to advancing technology; how fast they see the value of change.

Staff
Top-Loading Oven Grieve offers a new top-loading oven that electronically heats to 500 degrees F for curing components. The oven, No. 1007, features 4-in. insulated walls, an aluminized steel interior and exterior, a motor-operated rear hinge door and a compressed air manifold with eight connections; 60 KW are installed in Nichrome heating elements and three 3-HO recirculating blowers total 9,000 CFM for rear-to-front airflow.

Staff
Safety Station A storage unit for safety and first-aid equipment now is available from Shure Manufacturing. The reinforced steel safety unit features a stainless steel top and chase panel, and it comes equipped with leg levelers as well as a mirror, soap dispenser, towel dispenser, waste receptacle and emergency eye wash

Kerry Lynch
AAR Cargo Systems to install a main deck cargo loading system on Boeing 767-300 series aircraft, STC ST02767CH

Pat Toensmeier
The Pakistan defense ministry has awarded Lockheed Martin a $43-million contract to upgrade the avionics of seven navy P-3C Orion aircraft. The work, which will be done in the U.S. at plants in Eagan, Minn., and Greenville, S.C., is a continuation of a program that began in 2007. Lockheed then was named general contractor and paid $186.5 million to install new communication systems, inverse synthetic aperture radar, electronic support measures and acoustic tracking systems.

Heather Baldwin
Once upon a time, the most technically competent A&Ps comprised the ranks of aviation maintenance managers. Organizations needing to fill a management position often would look on the shop floor for a experienced person with mechanical smarts and hand him the job, the assumption being that those who were best at maintaining an aircraft also would be best at managing maintainers of aircraft. There’s just one problem with this approach: it doesn’t work.

LONDON—EASA issued mandatory safety directives in December for the replacement of specified parts on Rolls-Royce Trent engines powering Airbus A330 and A340 aircraft. This work must be completed by January 2011. The mandate relates to concerns of ice build-up in the fuel oil heat exchanger (FOHE), which could potentially block fuel lines and shut down engines during long flights—an occurrence thought to have caused the crash-landing of a Boeing 777 at Heathrow in January 2008 and a May 2009 engine malfunction on a Trent 700-powered Etihad Airways A330.

Elyse Moody
Eurocopter’s Brazil subsidiary Helibras will upgrade 34 Brazilian Army Aviation AS365K Panther helicopters with new Turbomeca Arriel 2C2 CG engines with FADEC and Rockwell Collins’ Pro Line 21 digital radio communications systems. The modifications, slated to take place at a rate of four helicopters per year between 2011 and 2021, should extend the fleet’s service life by at least 25 years.

Elyse Moody
Ameco Beijing inducted an LOT Polish Airlines Boeing 767-300 for a C Check on Jan. 11. The contract specifically covers the C check for the aircraft, one of six 767-300ERs operated by LOT Polish.

Elyse Moody
The Pentagon awarded Bell-Boeing an $11.8-million contract for work on the Suite of Integrated Radio Frequency Countermeasures (Sirfc) system, which provides protection for USAF Special Operations Command’s CV-22 tiltrotors. The work includes switch-out of two line-replaceable units and antenna radome design modifications. Sirfc was deployed with the aircraft last year in Africa.

Elyse Moody
Crane acquired Merrimac Industries, a Caldwell, N.J.-based designer and manufacturer of RF microwave components, assemblies and micro-multifunction modules, for about $52 million in a deal expected to close in the first quarter.

—Bill Burchell
In Russia, problems related to the SaM146 engine are reported to be behind the delayed delivery of the first Sukhoi Superjet 100, which Aeroflot now expects in mid-2010. The SaM146 engines are developed and produced by Powerjet, a joint venture between Snecma and NPO Saturn.

By Paul Seidenman
For airlines and business jet operators, there has long been the argument that radials are the aircraft tire of the future, given their significant advantages over bias types. Southwest Airlines’ Richard Giacomello reports that the carrier has seen about a 30% increase in overall tire life with radials over bias tires. The basis of that comparison is data collected since 2001 on the radial tires used on Southwest’s Boeing 737-700 and the bias types on its 737-300 and -500 aircraft.

Pat Toensmeier
Three H-3 Mk-2-variant Sea King helicopters operated by Egypt will be refurbished by AgustaWestland North America in a depot maintenance program. The company received a $17.4-million contract via the U.S. foreign military sales program. Work is to be finished by the end of the year.

Kerry Lynch
AeroNautique to install interior cabinets on Boeing 737-700 series aircraft, STC ST10957SC

By Robert W. Moorman
Enhancing safety remains the primary reason for installing health and usage monitoring systems (HUMS) on rotorcraft. But HUMS also reduce the operating costs of helicopters and prolong the useful life of various parts and systems. Operators use the technology to predict catastrophic component failures and replace those items in a timely fashion.