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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, January 25, 2024
Thanks to predictive maintenance systems, airlines can now navigate and use massive amounts of data more simply. These simple, platform-independent, web-based infrastructures allow the airline to develop new sorts of maintenance records in-house in an afternoon rather than waiting months for the component's original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to do so.
Fremont, CA: Almost every traveler has encountered a flight delay due to an airplane maintenance issue. They're aggravating and inconvenient. The widespread belief is that these inconvenient travel delays are only justified when the plane's flightworthiness is jeopardized. However, numerous additional maintenance difficulties, including maintenance issues within the cabin, might cause a trip to be delayed.
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Predictive maintenance analyzes past aircraft and maintenance data to generate component performance trends. The predictive maintenance system then generates comprehensive repair suggestions for the airline, which may aid in the prevention of maintenance-related delays, flight returns, or unfavorable aircraft-on-ground (AOG) scenarios. This will also allow the airline to convert unplanned maintenance to scheduled maintenance.
Predictive maintenance analyzes thousands of data and looks for connections between parameters in increasingly sophisticated systems with multiple possible failure points using artificial intelligence and machine learning. Because of its intelligence, the system learns and can fine-tune its algorithms and prediction skills with each fresh data package it analyzes.
Impacts of Predictive Maintenance on Passenger Experience
Predictive maintenance has multiple advantages that have the potential to revolutionize airline operations. Some of them include:
Cost Saving:
The advantage of predictive maintenance is demonstrated by averted airplane turns, delays, and cancellations, decreased maintenance costs, and lower spare parts stock for components. Predictive maintenance might detect a broken recline mechanism before it happens, allowing operators to remedy the issue during scheduled aircraft downtime.
Conserves Time:
One of the primary goals of predictive maintenance solutions is to help airlines use their data better. Furthermore, today's "smart" airplanes create orders of magnitude more operating and maintenance data than prior generations.
Thanks to predictive maintenance systems, airlines can now navigate and use massive amounts of data more simply. These simple, platform-independent, web-based infrastructures allow the airline to develop new sorts of maintenance records in-house in an afternoon rather than waiting months for the component's original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to do so.
Sustain the Planet:
Predictive maintenance can also affect sustainability. Although not in the cockpit, one example is the detection of ailerons - the small flaps on the edge of wings - that are "out of the rig." Traditional aviation maintenance will typically notice an issue only after the aileron has reached a minimum threshold for being out of the rig, implying that the aircraft may have been flying with sub-optimally adjusted ailerons for an extended time. This does not affect aircraft safety, although it does increase fuel consumption. Predictive maintenance lets an airline notice an out-of-rig scenario far earlier than a standard maintenance warning.
Airlines will be able to create information related to their operation and maintenance at a level previously unheard of thanks to increasingly linked aircraft and the resulting exponential data growth. This capability opens up a tremendous opportunity for predictive maintenance to significantly improve airline operations and the passenger experience.
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