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"Charles Talleyrand" wrote
How is aircraft maintenance organized? Is you average mechanic assigned to a plane or to a subsystem? In other words, is the mechanic assigned to Airplane #1234, or to "left wing hydraulics"? Back when I was in (70's and 80's) we started out with the time-tested crew chiefs and specialists. Using this system, the crew chiefs busted their ass on their plane, and the specialists mostly operated the BBQ and stood around smoking. Somewhere in the 80's they came up with the "everyone is a crew chief" concept, and specialists now had to rig their own jets to work on their subsystems. Before, a crew chief hooked up all the AGE and put it in a state where the specialists could begin work. Later, the specialists met with the crew chief and the crew chief ordered all the AGE, and when it arrived, the specialists hooked it up, and ran it. The crew chief then went off to do his own work, or assist other specialists. On big planes, you have several crew chiefs and probably five jobs being worked by various specialists. When everything's all fixed, the crew chief owns the jet and they clean it up for the next flight and complete the paperwork (most times today, the flight crew is in-place waiting for the crew chief to release the jet, as they are almost never ready for flight at the crew-show time). Where this tends to fail, is when you have an electronic specialist (for example) given the task of putting air in the tire. I think we've all seen the picture of the A1C blown-up on the ramp, with his nice regulation haircut being the only thing left of his head, when he decided to air up the nose wheel with the hi-pressure cart. Speaking of BBQ meat... Back in Thailand, many crew chiefs deployed to central shops, instead of being assigned individual tail numbers. Today, almost all jet tail numbers have a crew chief, and assistant. They own the whole jet, and are responsible for the 781 forms that say it is ready for flight. |
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On Mon, 04 Aug 2003 04:16:58 GMT, "S. Sampson" wrote:
"Charles Talleyrand" wrote How is aircraft maintenance organized? Is you average mechanic assigned to a plane or to a subsystem? In other words, is the mechanic assigned to Airplane #1234, or to "left wing hydraulics"? Back when I was in (70's and 80's) we started out with the time-tested crew chiefs and specialists. Using this system, the crew chiefs busted their ass on their plane, and the specialists mostly operated the BBQ and stood around smoking. Must have been the Russian Air Force.. |
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You aren't describing the navy system.
Airforce perhaps? "S. Sampson" wrote in message . .. "Charles Talleyrand" wrote How is aircraft maintenance organized? Is you average mechanic assigned to a plane or to a subsystem? In other words, is the mechanic assigned to Airplane #1234, or to "left wing hydraulics"? Back when I was in (70's and 80's) we started out with the time-tested crew chiefs and specialists. Using this system, the crew chiefs busted their ass on their plane, and the specialists mostly operated the BBQ and stood around smoking. Somewhere in the 80's they came up with the "everyone is a crew chief" concept, and specialists now had to rig their own jets to work on their subsystems. Before, a crew chief hooked up all the AGE and put it in a state where the specialists could begin work. Later, the specialists met with the crew chief and the crew chief ordered all the AGE, and when it arrived, the specialists hooked it up, and ran it. The crew chief then went off to do his own work, or assist other specialists. On big planes, you have several crew chiefs and probably five jobs being worked by various specialists. When everything's all fixed, the crew chief owns the jet and they clean it up for the next flight and complete the paperwork (most times today, the flight crew is in-place waiting for the crew chief to release the jet, as they are almost never ready for flight at the crew-show time). Where this tends to fail, is when you have an electronic specialist (for example) given the task of putting air in the tire. I think we've all seen the picture of the A1C blown-up on the ramp, with his nice regulation haircut being the only thing left of his head, when he decided to air up the nose wheel with the hi-pressure cart. Speaking of BBQ meat... Back in Thailand, many crew chiefs deployed to central shops, instead of being assigned individual tail numbers. Today, almost all jet tail numbers have a crew chief, and assistant. They own the whole jet, and are responsible for the 781 forms that say it is ready for flight. |
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