Owners Operators Guide 737ng
Owners Operators Guide 737ng
Owners Operators Guide 737ng
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of $70 per MH, the total cost for this
shop visit will be up to $2.0 million; the
higher level is more likely for second and
subsequent shop visits when a higher rate
of expensive parts will be replaced.
A fan/LPC workscope will require
400-900MH for all labour inputs,
$80,000-100,000 for materials and parts,
and up to $50,000 for sub-contract
repairs. This will take the total to
$180,000-230,000.
A workscope on the LPT can use 800-
1,500MH, depending on depth of scope
and level of parts repair and replacement.
Materials will cost $150,000-250,000,
and sub-contract repairs up to $50,000.
Total cost for the input will therefore be
$280,000-400,000.
A full overhaul will use 4,500-
6,000MH, and cost $300,000-400,000.
The cost of materials and parts will be
$1.4-1.7 million, depending on the level
of parts replacement and repair. Earlier
shop visits will have lower inputs,
compared to later visits, which will have
a higher cost of materials due to higher
scrap rates. The cost of sub-contract
repairs will be $400,000-500,000. Total
cost for the shop visit will therefore be
$2.2-2.6 million.
Unscheduled shop visits
Unscheduled shop visits fall into two
categories: engine- and non-engine
related. Non-engine-related shop visits
are mainly due to birdstrikes and foreign
object damage, and result in high shop-
visit costs.
Engine-related unscheduled shop
visits are light or heavy events. Light
events do not interrupt the pattern of
planned shop visits, and incur costs of
$200,000-350,000. If they occur at
average intervals of 60,000-70,000, a
reserve of $5 per EFH should be used.
Heavy engine-related events include
bearing failures. These and non-engine-
related events usually incur large shop
visit costs of $2.0-2.5 million, occurring
once every 35,000-40,000EFC. They
interrupt the pattern of planned shop
visits, so they replace one in every three
or four planned events. A reserve of $40-
50 per EFC should be made for these
events. The reserve for all unscheduled
shop visits is $26-31 per EFH.
Engine reserves
The removal intervals, shop visit
workscopes, LLP replacement, shop visit
costs and reserves in $ per EFC are
AIRCRAFT COMMERCE ISSUE NO. 70 JUNE/JULY 2010
28 I AIRCRAFT OPERATORS & OWNERS GUIDE
SHOPVISITWORKSCOPES, INPUTS & RESERVES FOR CFM56-7B FAMILY
Removal Shop Shop Unsched
Shop interval visit LLP visit LLP Reserve visits QEC Total
visit EFC workscope replacement cost-$ cost-$ $/EFC $/EFH $/EFH $/EFH
-7B20/22
1st 20,000 Full overhaul All parts 2,200,000 2,110,000 216 31 10 152
2nd 20,000 Full overhaul All parts 2,600,000 2,110,000 236 31 10 162
-7B24
1st 18,000 Level 2 core Core & LPT 2,250,000 1,684,000 241 31 10 165
& LPT
2nd 12,000 level 1 core & fan/LPC 2,050,000 424,000 257 31 10 173
level 2 fan/LPC
3rd 8,000 Level 2 core Core & LPT 2,350,000 1,684,000 375 31 10 233
& LPT
-7B24-Tech56
1st 20,000 Full overhaul All parts 2,200,000 2,110,000 216 31 10 152
2nd 15,000 Level 2 core Core & LPT 2,350,000 1,684,000 269 31 10 179
& LPT
3rd 15,000 level 2 core Full set 2,250,000 2,110,000 291 31 10 190
& fan/LPC
-7B26
1st 14,000 Level 2 core Core 1,800,000 1,090,000 251 31 10 170
2nd 8,800 level 1 core, Fan, LPC & 2,200,000 1,018,000 315 31 10 202
level 2 fan, LPC & LPT LPT
3rd 8,800 level 2 core Core 2,000,000 1,090,000 352 31 10 221
-7B26 Tech56
1st 16,000 Level 2 core Core 1,800,000 1,090,000 237 31 10 162
2nd 9,000 Level 1 core, Fan, LPC& 2,200,000 1,018,000 297 31 10 193
level 2 fan, LPC & LPT LPT
3rd 11,000 Level 2 core Core 2,000,000 1,090,000 301 31 10 195
-7B27
1st 10,000 Level 1 core 1,600,000 0 303 31 10 196
2nd 7,600 Level 2 core Core & LPT 2,350,000 1,684,000 406 31 10 249
& LPT
3rd 7,400 Level 1 core, Fan/LPC 1,850,000 424,000 359 31 10 225
level 2 fan/LPC
-7B27 Tech56
1st 12,000 Level 1 core 1,700,000 0 267 31 10 178
2nd 8,000 Level 2 core Core & LPT 2,350,000 1,684,000 374 31 10 233
& LPT
3rd 10,000 Level 1 core Fan/LPC 1,950,000 424,000 295 31 10 192
& level 2 fan/LPC
30 I AIRCRAFT OPERATORS & OWNERS GUIDE
AIRCRAFT COMMERCE ISSUE NO. 70 JUNE/JULY 2010
summarised for each engine variant (see
table, page 28).
The reserves per EFC at each removal
are not simply the cost of the shop visit
and LLPs replaced at the time, divided by
the most recent interval. The workscopes
for modules must be taken into
consideration, and LLPs must be replaced
once every two or three shop visits.
Reserves for these occurrences are spread
across several shop visits, thereby making
the calculation of reserves more difcult.
The reserves listed (see table, page 28)
relate to the shop-visit workscopes and
LLPs replaced. These are at a cost per
EFC.
There are additional reserves of $31
per EFH for unscheduled shop visits, and
$10 for the repair and management of
quick engine change (QEC) and accessory
rotable components.
The reserves for shop-visit inputs and
LLP replacement are then converted from
$ per EFC to $ per EFH, taking into
consideration the FH:FC ratio of 1.95:1.
Total reserves per EFH are shown in
the nal column (see table, page 28). The
reserves generally increase for each
variant as the engine experiences shorter
removal intervals after each successive on-
wing run. Reserves are lower for lower-
rated engines that have longer removal
intervals. Reserves for engines operating
in a harsh environment would be higher.
Reducing shop visit costs
The cost of shop visits is dominated
by the expense of materials and parts,
which can be reduced through a higher
rate of parts repair, or the use of parts
manufacturer approval (PMA) parts.
The most expensive engine parts are
the airfoils. Repairs to these can cut the
cost of shop visits by several hundred
thousand dollars. Chromalloy is one of
the largest providers of designated
engineering representative (DER) hi-tech
parts repairs for blades and stators in the
CFM56-7B. These are repairs that are not
approved by the OEM, and so are not
available in the engines repair and shop
visit manual. One example is the stage 1
HPT vanes. This is a very advanced
repair, since it requires the casting of new
airfoils, but it eliminates almost all airfoil
scrappage, says Rob Church, regional
sales director for the Americas at
Chromalloy. The list price for a set of
HPT vanes or NGVs in the -7B is
$700,000-800,000. There is usually a
20% scrappage rate at each shop visit,
but the cost of a repair is half that of a
new OEM part, thereby saving $100,000
per shop visit.
Chromalloy also has a repair for the
stage 1 LPT vane. Church says there is a
34% scrappage rate at each shop visit,
and that the repair can save $34,000 at
each shop visit. The list price for a shipset
of LPT vanes is $330,000.
Chromalloy also offers tip repairs to
HPC blades, and an erosion coating with
a tungsten-carbide cobalt. It will soon
offer an HPC blade chord restoration.
Another expensive part is rst stage
HPT blades. A typical blade scrappage
rate at the rst shop visit is 6%, and is
higher at the second shop visit. There are
80 blades in a set, and each blade has a
list price of $9,000-10,000. The potential
savings are therefore signicant.
Chromalloy also has repairs for HPC
stators, HPT shrouds and airseals.
MTU Maintenance also provides
some DER repairs for the CFM56-7B,
including a split vane repair for the NGV.
This costs $14,000, versus the $29,000
list price for a new unit. It also offers
repairs for combustion chambers.
Pratt & Whitney Engine Services
(PWES) also offers DER repairs for HPT
rst stage blades and NGVs.
Chromalloy offers several PMA parts
for the engine, and is developing more.
We already offer HPC stator seals and
LPT outer stationary airseals, says
Church. We are now developing PMA
blades, vanes, shrouds and HPT blades.
We expect to be able to offer HPT blades
for $6,000 each, which comes to
$240,000 less for a shipset. We already
offer PMAs for the stage 1 HPT NGVs
and stage 1 LPT NGVs, which provide
big savings when scrapped parts have to
replaced when they are beyond repair. We
offer PMA stage 1 HPT NGVs for
$15,000. With 42 in a set, the saving is
substantial.
The OEM rst stage NGVs in the
LPT have a list price of $15,000, while
we offer PMA parts at $9,000 each,
saving $6,000 per unit, adds Church.
DER repairs and PMA parts can save
as much as $350,000 per shop visit.
Summary
The 737NGs total maintenance costs
are $909-1,128 per FH, depending on
aircraft variant and engine model, for
aircraft in their rst cycle of main base
checks, up to their sixth or seventh base
checks at an age of 12-14 years, and for
aircraft with engines that are up to their
third removal and shop visit, which can
be as long as 50,000FC and 100,000FH,
equal to more than 25 years operation.
The varying total cost per FH is due
mainly to the engine reserves, which
gradually increase from the rst to the
third removal. The engines of most
737NGs are within their rst or second
engine removal cycles, so higher engine
reserves apply to few operators.
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DIRECT MAINTENANCE COSTS FOR 737NG FAMILY
Maintenance Cycle Cycle Cost per Cost per
Item cost-$ interval FC-$ FH-$
Line & ramp checks 350,000 Annual 110
A check 165,000 5,100FH 32
Base checks 25 million 39,000FH 65-70
Stripping & repainting 85,000 16,800 5
Interior refurbishment 28
Heavy components 254 130
LRU component support 235-255
Total airframe & component maintenance 605-630
Engine maintenance:
CFM56-7B20/22: 2 X $152-162 per EFH 304-324
CFM56-7B24: 2 X $165-233 per EFH 330-466
CFM56-7B24 Tech56: 2 X $152-190 per EFH 304-380
CFM56-7B26: 2 X $170-221 per EFH 340-442
CFM56-7B26 Tech56: 2 X $162-195 per EFH 324-390
CFM56-7B27: 2 X $196-249 per EFH 392-498
CFM56-7B27 Tech56: 2 x $178-233 -per EFH 356-466
Total direct maintenance costs per FH: 909-1,128
Annual utilisation:
3,300FH
1,700FC
FH:FC ratio of 1.95:1