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Contracting Agency: U.S. Air Force
Point of Contact: solutions@kbsi.com
Overview
To meet their high standards of system reliability,
the Air Force's current engine maintenance practices involve
frequent inspections, parts replacements, and re-working of
the engines. These frequent maintenance activities correspondingly
require a large inventory of spare engines and engine components.
Yet, it is not known how much of this cost is truly needed
to ensure the same level of reliability and availability.
Critical in reliably maintaining such an inventory
is understanding the costs associated with it--a shortcoming
of current maintenance practices. What is known is that scheduled
downtime often far exceeds unscheduled downtime, policy-driven
maintenance events often far overshadow reliability maintenance
events, and the downtime per maintenance event and the cost
per maintenance event at the aircraft level drives operational
availability and, ultimately, total ownership. It has been
discovered that traditional maintenance programs are not cost-effective
in ensuring the desired levels of reliability and availability
due, in part, to the lack of policies, procedures, and decision
support tools that would enable the necessary enterprise-level
perspective on maintenance planning and scheduling.
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