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SXDFC wrote:Hello All:
I am curious as to what the process is with regards to installing and uninstalling ETOPS on an aircraft. Particularly a 737. Can it be done overnight or is it typically done in a check? Also aside from safety equipment, what else is involved in making an aircraft an “ETOPS” aircraft?
zeke wrote:SXDFC wrote:Hello All:
I am curious as to what the process is with regards to installing and uninstalling ETOPS on an aircraft. Particularly a 737. Can it be done overnight or is it typically done in a check? Also aside from safety equipment, what else is involved in making an aircraft an “ETOPS” aircraft?
EDTO is an approval granted to an organisation not to a specific aircraft tail. The approval requires many items in engineering related to maintenance and operations relating to planning, operating, and monitoring flights.
zeke wrote:No, it’s an operational approval.
zeke wrote:There is no such thing as an EDTO installation for an aircraft, EDTO requirements depend on the regulator overseeing the operator.
Please stop posting misinformation. ETDO is an operational approval that is granted to an operator. What the operator needs to have in place to exercise that approval is contained in that document issued by the regulator.
An operator can dispatch hundreds of EDTO flights for other airlines, perform EDTO maintenance for other air rallies, may have crew with thousand’s of hours of EDTO experience, and aircraft with everything required. They cannot do anything without their particular regulator approving the operation, and often also required other regulators to grant approval under a Part 129 foreign AOC.
It does no rely on the aircraft equipment installed, more the way it is maintained and operated and the regulatory approvals.
hongkongflyer wrote:One of the most common equipments for ETOPS is those related to over water safety equipments.
zeke wrote:There is no such thing as an EDTO installation for an aircraft, EDTO requirements depend on the regulator overseeing the operator.
Please stop posting misinformation. ETDO is an operational approval that is granted to an operator. What the operator needs to have in place to exercise that approval is contained in that document issued by the regulator.
An operator can dispatch hundreds of EDTO flights for other airlines, perform EDTO maintenance for other air rallies, may have crew with thousand’s of hours of EDTO experience, and aircraft with everything required. They cannot do anything without their particular regulator approving the operation, and often also required other regulators to grant approval under a Part 129 foreign AOC.
It does no rely on the aircraft equipment installed, more the way it is maintained and operated and the regulatory approvals.
BoeingGuy wrote:zeke wrote:There is no such thing as an EDTO installation for an aircraft, EDTO requirements depend on the regulator overseeing the operator.
Please stop posting misinformation. ETDO is an operational approval that is granted to an operator. What the operator needs to have in place to exercise that approval is contained in that document issued by the regulator.
An operator can dispatch hundreds of EDTO flights for other airlines, perform EDTO maintenance for other air rallies, may have crew with thousand’s of hours of EDTO experience, and aircraft with everything required. They cannot do anything without their particular regulator approving the operation, and often also required other regulators to grant approval under a Part 129 foreign AOC.
It does no rely on the aircraft equipment installed, more the way it is maintained and operated and the regulatory approvals.
Completely correct, but back in the early days of the 757/767 there was optional equipment that was required for ETOPS capability. HF radios were optional, as was the Hydraulic Motor Generator. Both were required for ETOPS. In theory, you’d have to retrofit some equipment to be ETOPS capable.
Nowadays, all non-737 Boeing models have all equipage required for ETOPS approval installed as baseline equipment.
As you pointed out, I think the OP misunderstood what ETOPS approval entails.
xl0hr wrote:
Do you care to share what the 737 needs for ETOPS? Thanks!
xl0hr wrote:BoeingGuy wrote:zeke wrote:There is no such thing as an EDTO installation for an aircraft, EDTO requirements depend on the regulator overseeing the operator.
Please stop posting misinformation. ETDO is an operational approval that is granted to an operator. What the operator needs to have in place to exercise that approval is contained in that document issued by the regulator.
An operator can dispatch hundreds of EDTO flights for other airlines, perform EDTO maintenance for other air rallies, may have crew with thousand’s of hours of EDTO experience, and aircraft with everything required. They cannot do anything without their particular regulator approving the operation, and often also required other regulators to grant approval under a Part 129 foreign AOC.
It does no rely on the aircraft equipment installed, more the way it is maintained and operated and the regulatory approvals.
Completely correct, but back in the early days of the 757/767 there was optional equipment that was required for ETOPS capability. HF radios were
optional, as was the Hydraulic Motor Generator. Both were required for ETOPS. In theory, you’d have to retrofit some equipment to be ETOPS capable.
Nowadays, all non-737 Boeing models have all equipage required for ETOPS approval installed as baseline equipment.
As you pointed out, I think the OP misunderstood what ETOPS approval entails.
Do you care to share what the 737 needs for ETOPS? Thanks!
DL777200LR wrote:Dual HF is one example. Non etops 737s can have just one.
xl0hr wrote:Do you care to share what the 737 needs for ETOPS? Thanks!
JAGflyer wrote:
Off the top of my head, ETOPS ready for the 737NG and MAX would include life-raft stowage compartments (two compartments on the ceiling in the middle of the passenger cabin)
SXDFC wrote:Hello All:
I am curious as to what the process is with regards to installing and uninstalling ETOPS on an aircraft. Particularly a 737. Can it be done overnight or is it typically done in a check? Also aside from safety equipment, what else is involved in making an aircraft an “ETOPS” aircraft?
CALTECH wrote:
EDTO applies to all aircraft. ETOPS twins only.
zeke wrote:CALTECH wrote:
EDTO applies to all aircraft. ETOPS twins only.
ETOPS just means extended operations these days, it has nothing to do with twins.
CALTECH wrote:Has everything to do with twins
celestar345 wrote:Any part of the chain broken and the aircraft will be downgraded and will require at least a verification flight before it can regain the status. So it's not something you can just slap on overnight to make an aircraft able to perform ETOPS flight.
xl0hr wrote:Do you care to share what the 737 needs for ETOPS? Thanks!
zeke wrote:celestar345 wrote:Any part of the chain broken and the aircraft will be downgraded and will require at least a verification flight before it can regain the status. So it's not something you can just slap on overnight to make an aircraft able to perform ETOPS flight.
Most defects that downgrade an aircraft EDTO do not require a specific EDTO verification flight. And the verification flight can be a normal non EDTO sector, you can even depart on a flight that is planned with an EDTO sector, perform a test like an APU start in the first 60 min, and then continue.
It also perfectly legal to depart on an EDTO flight on aircraft like the A330/A350 without an APU, it is not an EDTO requirement for those aircraft.
celestar345 wrote:
That said, a lot of airlines I know (with exceptions of some cases) just have most aircraft ETOPS approved so equipment change is one less thing to worry about - and regarding maintenence having one standard is much less likely for human error, often outweights the extra cost required.
Dennispnut wrote:Regarding the maintenance perspective, I've heard that some airlines also choose to install ETOPS-certified parts on non-ETOPS aircraft so as to simplify maintenance procedures.
Dennispnut wrote:Regarding the maintenance perspective, I've heard that some airlines also choose to install ETOPS-certified parts on non-ETOPS aircraft so as to simplify maintenance procedures. IIRC Cathay Dragon, a subsidiary airline of Cathay Pacific, has non-ETOPS A330 installed ETOPS components as Cathay's A330 are ETOPS certified. It'd be easier to keep ETOPS components and maintenance standards only (no non-ETOPS types) meanwhile no need to certify ETOPS on all aircraft. It would be too costly to certify all aircraft but the aircraft may hardly fly ETOPS routes.
zeke wrote:
I am not aware of “EDTO certified parts
fr8mech wrote:
Our IPC clearly delineates between a part that is ETOPS approved vs. the same base part number that is not ETOPS approved.
zeke wrote:Dennispnut wrote:Regarding the maintenance perspective, I've heard that some airlines also choose to install ETOPS-certified parts on non-ETOPS aircraft so as to simplify maintenance procedures. IIRC Cathay Dragon, a subsidiary airline of Cathay Pacific, has non-ETOPS A330 installed ETOPS components as Cathay's A330 are ETOPS certified. It'd be easier to keep ETOPS components and maintenance standards only (no non-ETOPS types) meanwhile no need to certify ETOPS on all aircraft. It would be too costly to certify all aircraft but the aircraft may hardly fly ETOPS routes.
I am not aware of “EDTO certified parts”.
Many airlines employ EDTO practices on non-EDTO aircraft as the primary aim of EDTO maintenance practices is to improve reliability which is good for business. To retain EDTO the airline has to perform a certain threshold of EDTO sectors, KA being a majority short haul airline just didn’t do enough sectors that would qualify.
hongkongflyer wrote:They shared maintenance and parts with CX, which have enough EDTO sectors to qualify to treat wholE 330 as an EDTO approved planes. That’s why I said ETOPS has requirements on both airline and the planes.
zeke wrote:Approved and certified are very different meanings, what sort of parts ?
fr8mech wrote:It is an ETOPS certified assembly, and it is approved, for installation on both our B757 & B767 aircraft.
zeke wrote:
There is no “ETOPS certified assembly”, airframes and components are not ETOPS certified. The airframe will have type approval for ETOPS which means it has a configuration with the necessary redundancy for key systems like electrical, hydraulics, fire suppression, and communications. I suspect the APU is required on the 767 because it lacks electrical generator redundancy requirements without it, this needs to be able to start the APU in flight. Aircraft like the 747 have generator redundancy through the power plant configuration, they cannot start the APU in flight even if they wanted to. The A330 does not need the APU to dispatch ETOPS as it has the necessary electrical redundancy by having two generators per engine.
zeke wrote:They didnt share a lot of things, the two airlines did not share ground handling and maintenance organizations at HKG, nor did they even have simple things like engine oil in common. You are posting about things you have no direct knowledge of which are not true.
zeke wrote:There is no “ETOPS certified assembly”, airframes and components are not ETOPS certified.
zeke wrote:The A330 does not need the APU to dispatch ETOPS as it has the necessary electrical redundancy by having two generators per engine.
fr8mech wrote:Different aircraft, different operators, different rules.
celestar345 wrote:Well unfortunately for some work now they do share the maintenence organisation, for the lease returns at least. No easy work though....
celestar345 wrote:Maybe they do on the 757/767
celestar345 wrote:Do you mean the A350?
zeke wrote:CALTECH wrote:
EDTO applies to all aircraft. ETOPS twins only.
ETOPS just means extended operations these days, it has nothing to do with twins.
zeke wrote:CALTECH wrote:Has everything to do with twins
Nope, extended operations applies to all engine configurations.
CALTECH wrote:
Thanks for proving the point. ETOPS has everything to do with twins.
zeke wrote:
KA does not exist, https://www.cad.gov.hk/english/airoperator.html
Lease returns for the ex-KA aircraft back to the lessors would now be done as private operations, they are not under any AOC. To put a KA aircraft onto the CX AOC they would need similar process to the lease return maintenance package. CX engineering would manage and pay the contractors performing the work.
zeke wrote:fr8mech wrote:It is an ETOPS certified assembly, and it is approved, for installation on both our B757 & B767 aircraft.
There is no “ETOPS certified assembly”, airframes and components are not ETOPS certified. The airframe will have type approval for ETOPS which means it has a configuration with the necessary redundancy for key systems like electrical, hydraulics, fire suppression, and communications. I suspect the APU is required on the 767 because it lacks electrical generator redundancy requirements without it, this needs to be able to start the APU in flight. Aircraft like the 747 have generator redundancy through the power plant configuration, they cannot start the APU in flight even if they wanted to. The A330 does not need the APU to dispatch ETOPS as it has the necessary electrical redundancy by having two generators per engine.
bourbon wrote:zeke wrote:fr8mech wrote:It is an ETOPS certified assembly, and it is approved, for installation on both our B757 & B767 aircraft.
There is no “ETOPS certified assembly”, airframes and components are not ETOPS certified. The airframe will have type approval for ETOPS which means it has a configuration with the necessary redundancy for key systems like electrical, hydraulics, fire suppression, and communications. I suspect the APU is required on the 767 because it lacks electrical generator redundancy requirements without it, this needs to be able to start the APU in flight. Aircraft like the 747 have generator redundancy through the power plant configuration, they cannot start the APU in flight even if they wanted to. The A330 does not need the APU to dispatch ETOPS as it has the necessary electrical redundancy by having two generators per engine.
I am pretty sure the 767 can still perform an ETOPS flight with apu inop as long as the IDG’d are functional, the etops length gets reduced though.
zeke wrote:CALTECH wrote:
Thanks for proving the point. ETOPS has everything to do with twins.
Nope, the T in ETOPS does not mean twins, it used to some time ago, the rules were changed. ETOPS now means “extended operations”, it is no longer stands for “extended twin engine operations”.
Under the new ETOPS rules a MD-11 and 747 have to comply with their ETOPS requirements.