The Maintenance and Engineering Organizational Chart
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Transcript The Maintenance and Engineering Organizational Chart
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
The Maintenance and
Engineering Organization
Chapter 7
The Maintenance and Engineering
Organization
Introduction
Organizational Structure
Span of Control, Grouping of Similar Functions,
Separation of Production and Oversight Functions
The Maintenance and Engineering
Organizational Chart
Organization Structure and the TPPM
(Technical Policies and Procedures Manual)
Variations from the Typical Organization
Summary
Introduction
Key point: The organizational structure must
allow the company to meet its goals and
objectives and each unit within the company
must be endowed with sufficient personnel and
authority to carry out those objectives and meet
those goals
Organizational Structure
Three main concepts:
Span of Control
Grouping of Similar Functions
Separation of Maintenance Activities
from Oversight
Span of Control
Amount of personnel or activities one can
effectively supervise of control
By limiting the number of people that a
manager has to supervise, the work is
divided and the organization is run more
efficiently
Levels of Management determine # of
personnel
Higher usually lower personnel
Lower line maintenance - more
Grouping of Similar Functions
Grouping under One director, manager, or
supervisor for like tasks:
Refer to Fig. 7-1 pg. 86
Separation of Production & Oversight Functions
FAA rules require oversight/selfmonitoring functions of own rules and
those of a regulatory authority
QA, QC, reliability and safety programs
Must be separate to avoid conflict of
interest
Maintenance & Engineering Organizational Chart
The M&E department is responsible for
conducting all scheduled/unscheduled
maintenance, modifications within the
limits of the maintenance schedule and
still meet the flight schedule.
OPS is responsible for the flight planning,
to include flight crews, crew training etc.
Both the VP of M&E and OPS will have
equal weight…one can NOT exist without
the other
Maintenance Organization
Five Major Functions:
Technical Services
Engineering, planning, training, technical publications, and
computing
Aircraft Maintenance
Flight line, hangar, outstations, and maintenance control
Overhaul Shops
Off-aircraft maintenance, repair, and overhaul
Materiel Services
Ordering and maintaining supplies, handling warranties,
and moving repairable and consumable parts through the
system
Maintenance Program Evaluation
Monitoring activity for the organization, its workers and its
suppliers
Technical Services
Engineering
Development of the initial maintenance program
Tasks, intervals, schedules, etc.
Evaluation of service bulletins/letters for possible
inclusion into the airline's equipment or practices
Oversight of those SB/SL deemed beneficial
Oversight of airworthiness directives required by
regulatory authorities
Evaluation of problems identified by the reliability
program and any problems from maintenance
checks
Establish the policies and procedures for the M&E
organization
Involved in planning of facilities to ensure it meets
M&E requirements
Technical Services
Production Planning and Control
Responsible for maintenance scheduling and
planning
Manpower, parts, facilities, tools and special
assistance for maintenance or modifications
Functions include:
Short, medium and long term M&E planning
Establish standards for manhours, materiel,
facilities, tools and equipment
Work scheduling
Control of hangars
On-aircraft maintenance
Monitor progress of in-work maintenance
Technical Services
Training
Technical Publications
Curriculum, course development, administration, and training
records for all personnel
Able to establish new and special training based on needs of
the aircraft
New equipment, modifications, test procedures etc..
Maintains Master Library with list of all documents, too
include number of copies and format – paper, microfilm, or
electronic media
Responsible of tracking and issuing all revisions to
respective work centers
Must do periodic checks to ensure condition and current
Computing Services
Selection of software & hardware – with usage information
and requirement input from the individual
Training of M&E personnel on usage
Continuing support
Aircraft Maintenance
Three functions:
Flight Line Maintenance
Turnaround maintenance and servicing, daily checks,
short interval checks and minor modifications
Hangar Maintenance
Flight line maintenance, hangar maintenance and
Maintenance Control Center
Repairs, modifications, engine changes, painting,
corrosion control
Support shops – welding, seat and interior fabric,
composites and GSE
Maintenance Control Center
Tracks all flights in and out, and maintenance needs
Overhaul Shops
Engine Shop
Avionics Shop
Radios, navigation, radar, communication,
electrical
Mechanical Component Shop
Repair on types of engines and APUs
Actuators, hydraulic systems, flight control
surfaces, fuel systems, oxygen, pneumatics, etc.
Structures
Sheet metal and other structural elements
Materiel (Supply)
Responsible for:
Purchasing
Stocking and distribution
Inventory control
Shipping and receiving
To include M&E and administration and
management
Maintenance Program Evaluation
Quality Assurance
Ensures adherence to company policies and
procedures as well as FAA requirements and
those of suppliers
Conducts periodic audits to ensure
compliance
Quality Control
Routine inspections of maintenance and repair
work
Certify maintenance and inspection personnel
Manage the (Required Inspection Items) RIIs
program
Calibration of tools and equipment
Oversees the NDT/NDI /program procedures
Maintenance Program Evaluation
Reliability
Ensures that any problem areas are addressed
Data collection and analysis and publication of
monthly reliability report
Safety
Develops, implements and administers the safety
and health related activities for M&E
Handles all reports and claims
Summary of Management Levels
Responsible for all outlined
Administrative and personnel duties
Budgeting and planning (long and short
term)
Necessary interaction
Meetings, letters, seminars, conferences etc…
Management has determined structure
based on requirements to meet goals and
objectives of organization
Small Airlines
All activities are addressed regardless of
size although some may be combined
i.e. quality control functions to qualified
maintenance personnel
Technical publications, training, and production
planning and control may be under engineering
Line and hangar maintenance may be separate
departments but utilize same personnel based on
quals, certifications and skills
May not have own hangar maintenance –
may have to subcontract
Summary
Introduction
Organizational Structure
Span of Control, Grouping of Similar Functions,
Separation of Production and Oversight Functions
The Maintenance and Engineering
Organizational Chart
Organization Structure and the TPPM
(Technical Policies and Procedures Manual)
Variations from the Typical Organization
Questions?