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Thailand's Nok Airlines Public Company Limited Selects StandardAero For CFM56-7B Engine MRO Support, Renewing Long-Term Relationship

Thailand's Nok Airlines Public Company Limited Selects StandardAero For CFM56-7B Engine MRO Support, Renewing Long-Term Relationship

Business Wire17-06-2025
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--StandardAero, a leading independent pure-play provider of aerospace engine aftermarket services, has recently renewed its longstanding relationship with Thai low-cost airline Nok Airlines Public Company Limited ('Nok Air') through the provision of CFM International CFM56-7B turbofan engine maintenance, repair & overhaul (MRO) workscopes in support of the airline's fleet of Boeing 737-800 narrowbody aircraft.
StandardAero, a CFM International authorized CFM56-7B MRO provider, has already inducted two Nok Air CFM56-7B engines at its facility in Winnipeg, MB. Nok Air, which is famous for the bright yellow beaks on its aircraft, operates fourteen Boeing 737-800s, which are used for flights across Thailand, Southeast Asia, East Asia and South Asia.
'StandardAero is delighted to renew our partnership with Nok Air by providing the airline with reliable, cost-effective CFM56-7B support,' said Mario Romano, Airline Sales Director for StandardAero's Airlines & Fleet business unit. 'StandardAero previously provided Nok Air with Pratt & Whitney Canada PW150A engine services in support of its former fleet of Dash 8-400 turboprops for many years, and we are therefore very pleased to continue our association on the CFM56-7B platform. StandardAero's commitment to the highest levels of service quality should ensure that Nok Air is 'smiling across Asia' for many years to come!'
StandardAero has provided the global CFM56-7B operator community with a comprehensive range of engine services from its Winnipeg location since 2010. In addition to its existing Winnipeg capabilities, StandardAero now also provides CFM56-7B MRO support from its DFW International Airport location in TX, USA, which is seeing strong demand from Boeing 737NG operators and asset owners. These newly introduced capabilities offer operators the confidence and convenience of a second CFM56-7B engine line, enabling StandardAero to accommodate the MRO requirements of its customers around the world while also providing the assurance of test cell capability redundancy.
The company provides an extensive range of additional services for the CFM56 family, including component repair and overhaul capabilities through StandardAero's Component Repair Services (CRS) segment; engine, module and used serviceable material (USM) asset management support through PTS Aviation; and engine health monitoring (EHM) data analysis services.
Nok Air is a premium budget carrier under the management of Nok Airlines Public Company Limited. Nok Air remains committed to being the best premium budget airline in Thailand and Southeast Asia, offering high-quality, convenient, and smile-filled services. With a fleet of 14 Boeing 737-800 aircraft, the airline boasts an extensive domestic network in Thailand and international coverage in India and China.
CFM International, the 50/50 joint company between GE Aerospace and Safran Aircraft Engines founded in 1974, has redefined international cooperation and helped change the course of commercial aviation. Today, CFM is the world's leading supplier of commercial aircraft engines with a product line that sets the industry standard for efficiency, reliability, durability, and optimized cost of ownership for narrowbody aircraft. The company produces the LEAP and CFM56 families of engines, and supports LEAP and CFM56 fleets for more than 600 operators worldwide.
StandardAero is a leading independent pure-play provider of aerospace engine aftermarket services for fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft, serving the commercial, military and business aviation end markets. StandardAero provides a comprehensive suite of critical, value-added aftermarket solutions, including engine maintenance, repair and overhaul, engine component repair, on-wing and field service support, asset management and engineering solutions. StandardAero is an NYSE listed company under the ticker symbol SARO. For more information about StandardAero, go to www.standardaero.com.
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The Oldest Boeing Passenger Jet In Active Service Has Been Flying For Over 45 Years

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How Boeing is quietly betting on a ‘brilliant' 39-year old engineer—and setting the stage for a turnaround
How Boeing is quietly betting on a ‘brilliant' 39-year old engineer—and setting the stage for a turnaround

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How Boeing is quietly betting on a ‘brilliant' 39-year old engineer—and setting the stage for a turnaround

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'It was the first time his father had ever been out of the state, and the first time his mother had left the county.' Yutko and his two brothers were the first in the family to attend college—the younger a project engineer at a large power and metals company who also volunteers as a high school wrestling coach in the area, as does the youngest—all three honed clinches and armlocks on the mats at Mahanoy. At Penn State, where Yutko graduated in 2004, he majored in aerospace engineering and developed a love for jerry-rigging airborne vehicles from everyday materials. In a recent Reddit post, he recalled joining 'a project that designs and builds a sailplane' and getting assigned to 'weld out metal chromoly tube fuselage … because I knew how to weld.' Yutko didn't mention whether he learned the metal-bending skills at the family workplace, but jested: 'I'm positive my welding wouldn't pass proper inspection.' 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For years, in addition to their Cessna-piloting adventures, Yutko joined Hansman and Yutko's best friend, NASA astronaut and engineer Woody Hoburg, on motorcycle sojourns on their rented BMW 1200 rigs between Christmas and New Year's to exotic corners of the globe, from the deserts of Morocco to the valleys of Peru. During COVID, Yutko and Hoburg, a former rescue climber in Yosemite, camped in Red Rock Canyon near Las Vegas to practice their technical skills deploying lines and harnesses. On foot, Yutko has braved the race to the summit of Pikes Peak, a grueling contest that scales 7,800 vertical feet. A slim six-footer, his brown hair close-cropped, Yutko in his Wisk incarnation favored T-shirts and jeans. At work, he can be intense and demanding. 'He and I are both 'A' types, and we had quite a few battles,' says ex–Wisk boss Gysin, who adds that Yutko 'would really dig in on an issue' and relentlessly hammer home his position, a stance he learned in the Hansman crucible at MIT. 'I have a number of non-consensus views on a number of topics,' Yutko admitted in a recent podcast. Yet Gysin says that despite their dustups, he and Yutko 'are friends to this day.' According to fellow students and colleagues, Yutko's as likable as he is doggedly determined. Marvels Hansman, 'We'd go to a bar on the Moroccan coast on our motorcycle trips, and Brian would make friends with all the guys in the bar,' says Hansman. 'He's just magnetic.' Lishuai Li, a fellow PhD student under Hansman and now a professor at City University of Hong Kong, attests to Yutko's gift for putting people at ease. 'As an international student, I sometimes feel hesitant in social settings, so I'd sometimes be quiet. But Brian had a natural way of making everyone feel included.' Yutko is married, and he and his wife, who holds an MBA from Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business and previously worked as a White House advance aid, recently welcomed a son. And Yutko's funny. In interviews, he lampoons his own wonkish credentials by uncorking such quips as, 'I'll do a little systems engineering on your question.' As a PhD student, he coauthored a semi-satirical editorial that echoes 18th-century essayist Jonathan Swift's tongue-in-cheek 'A Modest Proposal.' The piece soberly calculates the dollars airlines could save if 'they could provide incentives for passengers to go the restroom before getting on a flight.' The authors also get serious, extolling the fuel economies garnered by ditching such items as water bottles handed out by flight attendants, and replacing 'flight bags' carrying heavy paper manuals, charts, and checklists with versions loaded on computerized tablets. The writing is so clever that, for this judge, it could have been penned by a professional pundit. Hansman praises Yutko's willingness to take chances when the potential payoff is big. 'This is a guy who listens, who thinks things through, who assesses risk, but doesn't have fear,' he observes. Extra lift After getting his PhD in 2014, Yutko split his time between MIT and Aurora Flight Sciences, an engineering firm that primarily created prototypes of unmanned, electric, and other next-gen planes, helicopters, and drones for the Department of Defense. At Aurora, he participated in a NASA design competition for a revolutionary, highly efficient commercial aircraft configuration called the D8. Boeing teams were competing on other models. Traditional aircraft design features a pressured tube for the passengers flanked by wings. But the D8 put two tubes side by side, which made the fuselage wider, enabling it to, in effect, become part of the wing and add to the lift. The design also placed the engines in the tail, which reduced turbulence from the fuselage. The D8 looked a bit like a shark, and won the moniker 'Double Bubble.' Its edge: It could carry wings smaller and lighter than those of regular planes because of the extra lift provided by the reshaped fuselage. Those characteristics lowered drag big-time. The D8 was also originally conceived to fly at slightly lower than normal speeds, a key to saving fuel that Yutko had identified in his doctoral work. Yutko tested D8 forerunners in a new wind tunnel donated to MIT by Boeing. The D8's stupendous goal: lowering fuel consumption by 70%. The tech incorporated in the D8 is still a contender for the new wave of narrow-bodies, and the program would prove Yutko's ticket to Boeing. Yutko had caught the eye of then–Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun, who picked the rising star for personal mentorship as part of a Boeing program where top executives nurture future leaders. By early 2023 Yutko was ready for a new challenge, which presented itself when autonomous flying-taxi startup Wisk, (founded by Google cofounder Larry Page but majority owned by Boeing) needed a new CEO. Yutko moved to Silicon Valley for the job. The Wisk rises like a helicopter; then six of its forward rotors tilt outward, and it flies like a plane. Yutko foresaw a network of 'vertiports' at airports, topping highways and mounted on rooftops ferrying passengers up to 100 miles in what he widely praised as possibly 'the next big leap in aviation.' Given the resistance of pilots' unions and traffic controllers, and skepticism from regulators, for autonomous flight, it's unclear when or if Wisk will reach the market. Still, Yutko continued to advance autonomous technology and added AI applications to simulate flight planning and patterns. Those improvements could potentially improve safety and testing on commercial planes. Boeing's next big bet Of course, any decision on a new plane will fall to Ortberg and the Boeing board. Once they approve takeoff, the aircraft-maker typically taps two leaders to head a greenfield project, according to an executive who worked for a Boeing supplier: a program manager, and a lead project engineer. The program manager is tasked with hitting key milestones for schedule and costs, and reports to the business side. The lead project engineer is responsible for working with the supply base to optimize the plane's design and development, and bring it to market. That person is part of the engineering team that, it appears, would work closely with Yutko as chief of commercial airplane development. 'You can't BS Brian on the engineering side,' noted one of his former colleagues. What's this airborne breakthrough likely to look like? The advantage to the super avant-garde models Yutko knows so well is that the airframes themselves promise tremendous gains in fuel efficiency and CO2 reductions. The D8 'Double Bubble' technology that Yutko labored on featuring the bulbous fuselage is still a leading candidate. Another potential winner is the so-called X-66, also known as the jawbreaker transonic truss-braced wing or TTBW. Conceived in-house at Boeing, and long supported by grants from NASA, the X-66 features extra-long, thin wings supported by diagonal struts, so that from the nose you're looking at two triangles. In April, Boeing scrapped pursuit of an X-66 demonstrator in partnership with NASA, but pledged to keep working on thin-wing technology. It's not clear if the TTBW or another model will prove the winner, but Yutko has expressed openness to new aircraft configurations. 'It's really an open book,' says Hansman. Yutko will be leading the evaluation of all the technical and design options, including the use of alternative fuels and new engine technologies, as well as automation. In October of 2024, Yutko gathered with many of Hansman's former students to salute their beloved teacher's 70th birthday with a series of lectures. Yutko took the stage for a presentation reviewing 210 years of aviation history. He started by recapping the first primitive, butterfly-shaped gliders, reminding the audience, '[I'm] as you all know … a future-thinker,' then spotlighted the 'opportunity for new airplane shapes' and lauded the 'Double Bubble … that came out of MIT' and 'that I'm so passionate about.' Boeing watchers may similarly hope that the storied company is entering a new era, too. And Boeing finally has what it needs, a visionary engineer who can pilot this lagging colossus towards winning the big one, the contest for the aircraft of the future. This story was originally featured on Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Melden Sie sich an, um Ihr Portfolio aufzurufen. 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Jim Cramer on Boeing: 'Just Call Me a Buyer of That One'
Jim Cramer on Boeing: 'Just Call Me a Buyer of That One'

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Jim Cramer on Boeing: 'Just Call Me a Buyer of That One'

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