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Engineering first for Emirates
The new high-tech docking system to service the worlds
latest multi-million dollar jetliners, the first multi-aircraft
dock in the world, will soon go into service with
Emirates, the Dubai-based international airline.
The US$4.5m dock system will be suitable for the Boeing 777-200/300,
Airbus A340-500/600, A330, A300, A310 and Boeing 767.
Ultimately destined for Dubai International Airport, it now
towers above the premises of construction firm Al Roumi/J Mullins
on an industrial estate in Al Awir, Dubai. It will allow Emirates
Engineering personnel full access to all areas of the various
aircraft types in complete safety at heights of up to 60 feet
above ground.
The huge 330-tonne dock will soon be dismantled into six sections
and hoisted into place by giant cranes after a four-mile midnight
trip from Al Awir to the airport on 35-metre transporters.
It will be the first anywhere in the Middle East suitable for
the highly popular long-range Boeing 777-300, in service with
Emirates and many other airlines, and is being commissioned
by mid-October in time for the first major maintenance C
check on an Emirates B777-300.
Computer-controlled and guided by lasers, electronic pro-logic
controls and 14 electric motors, the two sides of the giant
assembly will slide inwards on rails to shrink fit
automatically to within a centimetre of an aircrafts fuselage.
Emirates already has a docking system at its Dubai maintenance
base. The new system is larger so it can accommodate B777-300s
and A340s, increases the airlines heavy maintenance capabilities
and opens the way to a major expansion in third party maintenance
work.
Head of Emirates engineering, Adel Al Redha, said: This
custom-built docking system will be the first of its kind anywhere
in the Middle East. Docking an aircraft will take just 90 minutes,
dramatically reducing the time needed to manoeuvre heavy maintenance
equipment by hand as well as cutting the cost of mandatory inspections.
In todays cost-conscious world, productivity improvements
are vital.
New maintenance facilities are also in the pipeline for the
Airbus A380 double-decker aircraft.
Emirates has so far ordered seven, becoming the worlds
first airline to commit to the project. In Malta, Emirates Airline
operates three weekly flights: on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays
on the Airbus A300-600R. Flights from Dubai to Malta are direct
while those from Malta to Dubai fly via Tripoli.



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