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A bird-damaged Southwest Boeing 737 returns to service in 48 hours
A Southwest Boeing 737, which was damaged by a bird strike, returned to service just in two days thanks to the quick work by NVision Inc., a 3D non-contact optical scanning and measurement company. The rapid turnaround helped Southwest avoid the financial losses caused by grounding an aircraft for a long period. Bird strikes cost airlines billions of dollars each year. Not only because of the damage, but also the incurring capacity loss due to the grounded aircraft. In 2017, bird strikes caused… (airlinerwatch.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Very Simple... RVSM... FAA Requirement to fly between FL280 and FM410... It is the law!
Since when has the wing become part of the RVSM critical area? I guess there could be a static port in the wing but I’m not familiar with one.
I did not see where it said Wing, but many bird strikes do damage in the RVSM Critical Area that require mapping... I must have missed when they said where the bird strike was... However, if you do the area mapping on the wing and get it exactly right, the plane will be more fuel efficient and save money there...
I agree with that. I would think lasers would be a very useful tool for a repair on any airfoil or flight control.
How do they even get a damaged aircraft to Ecuador and back in two days?
Ecuador? The company is in Southlake, TX.
airframe manufacturer, MRO facility or airline proper manufacturing parts with 3D printing technology.