About 5 of 20 are done. As for the 73's it will be a while before the first shipsets arrive. Some are set up to readily accomadate winglets while most others will require structural work. My guess is that line stations may outfit the former while Tulsa will handle the latter. TWU 514 may say otherwise....
DFW is being told by the local that the 737 winglet mod and the MD80 galley removal mod are coming this way, this summer. How much weight I'll put into some known liars(local officers) words - not much.Tulsa will do all the 737 winglet mods. Even with the 737's that were built with winglets in mind it's still a job line stations are really not set up for.
DFW is being told by the local that the 737 winglet mod and the MD80 galley removal mod are coming this way, this summer. How much weight I'll put into some known liars(local officers) words - not much.
That makes two of us.Now there's something I'll beleive when I see it.
Those 25 737's would make sense. The problem with the rest is not as much the expertise, as most of DFW AMT's worked at overhaul at one time, but the lack of equipment, tooling, and a management team that for the most part never worked overhaul.Only the last 25 deliveries of AA's 737 fleet have the strengthened outer spar and attach point for the winglet.
That would be true with the galley removal also.Agreed. Tooling for the actual mod may not be as much of a concern if there was a kit, but God only knows what they'd discover once the sheet metal came off.
That would be true with the galley removal also.
Now picture the line supervisors face when faced with that dilema.![]()
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DFW did a lot of the seat mods for More Room / Less Room, so I can see the galley mod coming there.
Only the last 25 deliveries of AA's 737 fleet have the strengthened outer spar and attach point for the winglet. The rest requires similar structures work to the 757 mod, and I've never seen anything to that extent done in a line station.
When N244 ran off the runway in ORD about 15 years ago, it tore off the nose gear and just about all the skin and stringers forward of the entry door. A group from structures was flown in, and "TUL North" rebuilt it onsite at ORD to the point where it could be flown unpressurized to TUL for the remaining work. Maybe things have changed since then, but with all due respect to the line AMT's, I wouldn't expect that level of expertise to be widespread.