Airborne Maintenance & Engineering Services Receives STC Approval for Automatic Dependent Surveillance
Airborne Maintenance & Engineering Services, a wholly owned subsidiary of Air Transport Services Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:ATSG), announces it has received supplemental type certification (STC) approval from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) modifications on Boeing 757, 767-200, and 767-300 aircraft. The Airborne solution includes many cost-saving features while minimizing aircraft downtime and upgrade expense to comply with satellite-based augmentation system (S-BAS) requirements mandated by the FAA for 2025.
The new ADS-B Out certification pairs the new ACSS (Thales) Transponders, which were the first to the market and are already in production, with two Esterline/CMC CMA-5024 SBAS GPS receivers to provide position information to the transponders. The CMA-5024 also will prepare the aircraft for the future; LPV and GBAS are upgrades that can be added using the CMA-5024. The CMA-5024 gives the operator the best capability with more options for future growth by not only meeting FAA ADS-B mandates for 2020 but also meeting the S-BAS 2025 requirements, providing operators substantial cost-savings during the upgrade and reducing overall out-of-service time per aircraft.
Airborne brings the approval to the marketplace to help meet global demand for the ADS-B upgrade by the FAA deadline of January 1, 2020. The upgrade can be completed on-site at either of the company's MRO facilities in Wilmington, OH, or Tampa, FL. In an effort to provide all carriers with a cost-effective option, Airborne can deploy Go-Teams ready to meet an aircraft at any location to provide the upgrade.
To find out more about the STC or to read full details, visit www.airbornemx.com.