At Lufthansa Technik Malta, 700 hidden figures keep aviation the safest way to travel. The highly trained team specializes in aircraft safety checks and overhauls. They inspect and repair fleets from airlines around the world. The ultimate Mega Pitstop Their recent project: Kilo Romeo An Airbus A330300. Effort of this Pitstop: 25.000 manhours. Time is a crucial issue, as Kilo Romeo is already scheduled for the next flight. From now on the team only has 40 days to deliver a good as new aircraft. The whole cabin gets stripped down. Engineers remove, check, repair and reinstall millions of pieces. Seats, kitchen and bathroom monuments, wall and floor panels. In multiple workshops specialists refurbish every single item – racing against a tight schedule. Once all parts of the cabin are completely dismantled, inspectors check and overhaul every inch of the aircraft’s base structure. The steel frame, isolation and dozens of kilometers of cable. Not a single screw stays unchecked. At the same time another unit scans the plane’s exterior for damages. Especially the sides and roof often get seriously hit by lightning strikes and need to be patched. Mechanics also cautiously take off and refurbish the six tons Rolls Royce engines. From the wings to deep into the fuel tanks: The engineers review every security relevant parts – multiple times. To make sure the passengers are safe. A fascinating and rare insight – only on Mega Pit Stops
The Russian highspeed train Sapsan is the longest of its kind. Based on the ICE 3, this gigantic machine travels at over 250 kilometers per hour. Sapsan means “peregrine falcon” in russian. Both, the falcon and the train are true longdistancespecialists. However, after 1.2 million kilometers, each Sapsan is due for its big R3revision. Since the Sapsan trains have only been launched in 2009, for the first time ever now a Russian highspeed train returns into the depot for the biggest overhaul in its entire life span. Every single part of the train is inspected and, if necessary, replaced. A highlight of the revision: disassembling and replacing the bogies. A critical part in the procedure they are essential to passenger’s safety. Each of them weighs around 8 to 12 tons and yet have to be handled by hand To do so, the massive train is separated into two halves. Now, 5 coaches which means: 125 meters have to be lifted at a time. A delicate maneuver All of the massive carriage jacks have to work accurately to a millimeter so that the heavy train won´t buckle sideways. To meet the incredible tight schedule of only 34 days, every little detail of the R3 needs precise planning beforehand. “Smaller” repairs such as the change of pantographs or substitutions of interior can be quite time consuming. To doubleup the speed of the R3, the engineers work parallel on both halves of the train, before the Sapsan gets a brandnew painting in the end.
The most modern warship in the Danish Navy the HDMS Absalon needs a major overhaul. Every 5 years, the warship is docked, and checked to the bones. This happens in Orskov Yard in Frederikshavn, North Denmark. The flexible support ship is 137 meters long and equipped with highprecision weapon systems: From torpedoes to machine guns to antimissile weapons. Thanks to its smooth and angled outer skin, the Absalon reflects only a fraction of radar radiation, making her extremely difficult to detect. The tracking systems of the warship itself, on the other hand, are highly sensitive. Space for two helicopters, two separate engines, bulletproof steel and the most sophisticated technology – all of this is due to be inspected. The most complex of all the processes: Checking the marine shaft device. Which, in effect, means cutting a hole in the ship to remove the rudder and propellers. The bow thruster is removed and maintained, as well as the sonar – a top secret mission. And then there are the upgrades: The technicians install a brand new UV filter system for cleaning the ballast water painters give the entire ship a new look. All of this happens under extreme time pressure: the team has only 5 weeks. But unexpected problems, as well as the special construction of the highlyequippen vessel pushes the engineers to their limits. In this MEGA PIT STOP.
It is an almost impossible endeauvour: The Peter Pan, a gigantic car ferry shall become even bigger. It is lengthened from 190 to a mighty 220 metres How do the engineers do that They cut the ferry into two parts and insert a 30meterlong section in the middle, which is prefabricated in another shipyard, 200 kilometers away. All this – in just 58 days. Because time is a crucial issue here, sixty workers already start preparing the ferry for her lengthening during its final crossing to the shipyard: German Dry Docks in Bremerhaven. The responsible engineers are nervous: to fit all the restrictions of the shipping company TTLine, they have to apply a very special cutting method, that has never been used before. And in fact: the first problems arise, when they try to pull the two halves of the ship apart – each of them weighing several thousand tons. Some steel beams have snagged. But this is not the only problem the crew will have to deal with: they can only move the gigantic single pieces of the ship when the dock is flooded. Lose ends like the engine room therefore have to be sealed up watertight to save the sensitive technology. Will the welding seams hold Will the mid section arive on time in Bremerhaven Will the three single pieces all fit together in the end The first passengers are already booked on the new Peter Pan. A breathtaking race against time…
Hindi
12 December 2022
Technology, Science
Lars Assmann