Virgin Atlantic
has signed an agreement with Boeing to use Boeing's Airplane Health Management system to
monitor the in-flight condition of its 747-400 fleet.
Virgin Atlantic's 13 747-400s will use Airplane Health Management to gather and evaluate critical
in-flight data on the real-time flying condition of the airplanes, information that can be used across
the enterprise to identify and address efficiency issues. Airplane Health Management gives airlines
significant insight as to the condition of airplanes in the sky, providing in-flight access to fuel-burn
information so airlines can identify and correct problems that might be wasting fuel.
In some cases, Airplane Health Management allows airlines to begin working faults while an airplane is in the air. For example, a fault
identified by AHM and relayed to ground controllers provides airlines the visibility to turn a potentially costly on-ground maintenance delay
into an easily addressable repair that minimizes or eliminates scheduling problems for passengers.
AHM also supports long-term fleet-reliability programs by helping airlines identify and respond to faults proactively. The system provides
fleet-wide information aggregated from other operators, which can be used to determine, for example, the effectiveness of particular
maintenance actions in fixing problems. The goal is to help airlines operate at the highest levels of reliability and efficiency.
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