KirbyWan
Aerospace
- Apr 18, 2008
- 583
Howdy all,
So front line carriers often prohibit PMA parts for repairs without approval. Some PMA parts are approved by Identicality per a licensing agreement, and these usually have the same part number. It is a PMA part and should say PMA on the ID tag and the 8130, but with the same P/N I could see this easily slipping by as an OEM part. We can track these different parts by creating a part record specific to a manufacturer so Boeing is the OEM and has one part record and Goodrich has licensed the part so they can make it and we have created a different part record to track them.
For the folks who work at a front line carrier and prohibit PMA parts without approval, are these parts produced by identicality an issue? I always thought it was a concern that the parts produced by test reports and computation were the concern that they may not have the same level of quality as the OEM. Those parts have to have a different part number, usually the base number with a prefix for the company making it so they are not easily confused.
Would an OEM use a PMA part produced by a licensed vendor? It would broaden the manufacturing base.
Thanks,
-Kirby
Kirby Wilkerson
Remember, first define the problem, then solve it.
So front line carriers often prohibit PMA parts for repairs without approval. Some PMA parts are approved by Identicality per a licensing agreement, and these usually have the same part number. It is a PMA part and should say PMA on the ID tag and the 8130, but with the same P/N I could see this easily slipping by as an OEM part. We can track these different parts by creating a part record specific to a manufacturer so Boeing is the OEM and has one part record and Goodrich has licensed the part so they can make it and we have created a different part record to track them.
For the folks who work at a front line carrier and prohibit PMA parts without approval, are these parts produced by identicality an issue? I always thought it was a concern that the parts produced by test reports and computation were the concern that they may not have the same level of quality as the OEM. Those parts have to have a different part number, usually the base number with a prefix for the company making it so they are not easily confused.
Would an OEM use a PMA part produced by a licensed vendor? It would broaden the manufacturing base.
Thanks,
-Kirby
Kirby Wilkerson
Remember, first define the problem, then solve it.