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Fault forwarding
Fault forwarding is a maintenance technique which is used to decrease the time taken to repair a vehicle. The problem is reported by the vehicle while it is in use and the maintenance team plan their repair before they have access to the vehicle. Therefore, when the vehicle is with them they will already have gathered the necessary parts and expertise. Thus minimizing the time taken to return the vehicle to service.
Examples
Motor racing
The racecar is often highly instrumented and has a telemetry link back to the pit crew. The mechanics will diagnose issues while the car is still on the track. When it returns to the pit lane for repair they will have the necessary parts ready to get the repair completed as fast as possible.
Airlines
This technique is also sometimes used by airlines to try to reduce the impact of unscheduled maintenance to their schedule.
Problems are sent to the airline operations center through the ACARS link.
The maintenance team then diagnose the problem and plan the necessary maintenance.
When the aircraft lands the team will already have planned and prepared to try to turn the aircraft around within its normal schedule while it is at the gate.
References
References
- (1 March 2007). "2007 IEEE Aerospace Conference".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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