Two years ago Bob Johnson and AlliedSignal came to Paris in exactly
the same state they're in today-unable to talk about the future
while awaiting regulatory approval for a major acquisition.
Then, AlliedSignal had just announced it would merge with Honeywell.
Now Honeywell (since successfully merged with AlliedSignal) is the
target, pending its acquisition by General Electric.
So, unable to talk about strategy, Johnson-president and CEO of
Honeywell Aerospace-is taking delight in talking instead about Honeywell's
vision of making flying better for airlines and passengers alike.
And that vision is about to become reality with the naming here
of the first two customers to sign up for a product so new it didn't
even have a name only a month before the show.
Loosely termed an "Aviation Information Solution," the
product aims to arrest flight delays. Last year the airlines lost
$2.5 billion through delays, and according to Johnson fully 80%
of them were caused by factors that could have been under the control
of the carriers and their operations centers.
"What we're doing is turning the airplane into an information
and communications center so the airlines can know more about the
status of the equipment in real time," he says. "This
lets them be more in control of when a maintenance activity takes
place."
But the system goes much further. It feeds that data through predictive
and planning software, linking the aircraft to operations, maintenance,
planning and the supply chain.
"This lets an airline make real time decisions about how to
optimize usage of aircraft, and ties in the ground operations on
the airside of the airport," Johnson says.
The system utilizes Honeywell's Airline Maintenance and Operations
Support System (AMOSS), which links an aircraft's avionics and digital
diagnostic boxes to the airline's maintenance computers by means
of an air-to-ground datalink. The information ties into an innovative
ground-based software system that provides state-of-the-art maintenance
management and aircraft systems diagnostics.
Open architecture means it will work with any manufacturer's equipment.
But it is not, Johnson insists, a "drop-in" product. Instead
it will be customized and optimized to meet each customer's needs.
By John Morris