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| Posted: | 2012-8-27 |
| Title: |
US Navy Cuts Inspection Budgets with Common Video Borescope Set (Video) |
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The Navy has recently developed a device that is doing for aircraft inspections
what colonoscopies have done for cancer detection.
Approved for production and delivery to the fleet this past May, the Common
Video Borescope Set, or CVBS, is used to inspect interior engine components
and airframes for cracks, corrosion and other debris that can harm Navy and
Marine Corps aircraft.
"Compressor blades rotating in an aircraft engine power naval aviation on a
daily basis, but anything accidentally entering the engine intake can create
nicks and chip the blades," said Lt. Cmdr. Francini Clemmons, assistant deputy
program manager for nondestructive inspection equipment, who oversees the
CVBS project for the Aviation Support Equipment Program Office (PMA-260).
"Instead of taking the engine apart, the video borescope allows inspectors to
look into the jet engine, saving time and energy."
The borescope will not only bring commonality to the fleet and revolutionize
the way the Department of the Navy inspects aircraft and engines but it will also
provide real-time digital images and video for examination, Clemmons added.
"The CVBS can be likened to a colon screening, but ours is kinder and gentler to
the aircraft," he said. "It will instantly increase the efficiency and effectiveness of
our inspection procedures."
The CVBS is a naval modified version of a commercial-off-the-shelf product
and will support all aircraft platforms requiring video borescope inspections of
their airframes and engines. Marking an important acquisition milestone, "initial
operating capability" is scheduled for September 2012 when units will be
delivered to Sailors and Marines.
The CVBS offers many advantages over its varied predecessors, PMA-260
officials said. While previous borescopes in the naval inventory detected engine
debris with a rigid probe and generated low-quality, black-and-white pictures,
the CVBS has a 2-meter long, flexible, insertion tube that captures photos and
video images on a 3.7-inch color screen. Technicians will use a joystick to
maneuver the device’s insertion tube, giving them a 360-degree view of hard-
to-see places.
All CVBS handsets are capable of defect measurement and offer two hours of
battery operation. The CVBS Type V variant comes with a working channel and
tools that can retrieve debris.
At 3.74 pounds, the CVBS is also less expensive and lighter than its 30-pound
predecessors. Many of the 27 varieties of legacy borescope systems could cost
as much as $30,000 per unit, Clemmons said. The Navy plans to buy 960 CVBS
units at an approximate cost of $15,000 each.
Marc Donohue, nondestructive inspection Common Support Equipment
integrated program team lead for PMA-260, said he has received positive
feedback from both fleet and fleet support team personnel who have used the
CVBS during the test and evaluation phase.
"The unit is ruggedized, highly portable and over 80 percent lighter than many
of the legacy units it replaces," Donohue said. "The CVBS improves equipment
survivability and reliability while providing enhanced capability. The program
achieves cost-wise readiness at less than 50 percent of the CVBS program’s
cost objective and at only 31 percent of the cost of sustaining legacy system
requirements."
About the Aviation Support Equipment Program Office
The Aviation Support Equipment Program Office manages the procurement,
development and fielding of common ground support equipment and automatic
test equipment, which support every type, model and series of aircraft within
the Naval Aviation Enterprise. |
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