MRO & Manufacturing
ADAC Luftrettung Signs Airbus Contract for H135 H140 and H145 Helicopters
ADAC Luftrettung secures a framework contract with Airbus to acquire H135, H140, and H145 helicopters, modernizing its emergency medical fleet.
This article is based on an official press release from Airbus.
ADAC Luftrettung, one of the largest Helicopter Emergency Medical Services (HEMS) operators in Europe, has officially signed a strategic long-term framework contract with Airbus Helicopters. The agreement covers the acquisition of Airbus H135, H140, and H145 helicopters, securing a modernized fleet for the German non-profit organization.
According to the official press release from Airbus, this new framework contract cements an initial agreement made during last year’s Verticon event. At that time, ADAC Luftrettung was introduced as both a launch customer and a development partner for the newly unveiled H140 helicopter.
By integrating these advanced rotorcraft into their operations, ADAC Luftrettung aims to enhance its airborne emergency medical care capabilities. The diversified fleet will allow the operator to better match specific helicopter types to the unique demands of various emergency medical missions across their network.
The decision to acquire a mix of H135, H140, and H145 helicopters reflects a strategic approach to fleet management. In the company press release, Airbus noted that the inclusion of the new 3-tonne class H140, alongside the proven H135 and H145 models, ensures maximum versatility and efficiency for the operator.
Currently, ADAC Luftrettung operates a fleet of 60 Airbus helicopters distributed across 37 stations. The organization is highly active; in 2025 alone, their crews responded to approximately 50,000 missions. The new aircraft are expected to support this high operational tempo by providing reliable, around-the-clock readiness, including the capability to perform rescue missions in total darkness.
“By investing in these new aircraft, we are deliberately embracing state-of-the-art flight technology that will significantly enhance our airborne emergency medical care over the long term,” said Frédéric Bruder, CEO of ADAC Luftrettung, in the Airbus press release.
Patient and flight safety remain the primary focus for both ADAC Luftrettung and Airbus. The framework agreement is designed to maintain these safety standards at the highest possible level while also addressing environmental and economic factors. The new helicopters are engineered to offer lower fuel consumption and greater cost efficiency, aligning with modern operational needs.
The partnership between the two organizations spans several decades, with ADAC Luftrettung consistently playing a key role in the development and deployment of Airbus rotorcraft for emergency medical services. “We are proud to continue our decades-long partnership with ADAC Luftrettung as they lead the way into the future of air rescue,” stated Bruno Even, CEO of Airbus Helicopters, in the official release. “This framework contract underscores our shared mission to provide crews with the quietest, safest, and most technologically advanced tools to deliver life-saving care.”
We view this framework contract as a significant milestone for the European HEMS sector. By committing to the new H140 alongside the established H135 and H145 platforms, ADAC Luftrettung is positioning itself to handle a broader range of mission profiles with optimized payload and range characteristics. The emphasis on lower fuel consumption also indicates a growing industry trend toward more sustainability aviation practices, even in critical life-saving operations where performance cannot be compromised. Furthermore, solidifying the Verticon 2025 launch agreement demonstrates strong confidence in the H140’s development trajectory and its future role in emergency medical services.
The contract between ADAC Luftrettung and Airbus includes the H135, H145, and the newly developed 3-tonne class H140 helicopters.
According to the Airbus press release, ADAC Luftrettung currently utilizes 60 Airbus helicopters operating out of 37 stations.
In 2025, the operator responded to approximately 50,000 emergency missions.
Fleet Modernization and Operational Capabilities
Safety, Efficiency, and Partnership
AirPro News analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
What helicopters are included in the new framework contract?
How large is ADAC Luftrettung’s current fleet?
How many missions did ADAC Luftrettung fly recently?
Sources
Photo Credit: Airbus
MRO & Manufacturing
Boeing Advances Safer Paint Stripping to Prevent Fuselage Pitting
Boeing develops pH-neutral benzyl alcohol paint strippers to eliminate fuselage pitting and improve safety in aircraft maintenance.
This article is based on internal communications and an official press release from Boeing (Boeing News Network).
Commercial aircraft undergo rigorous and highly regulated maintenance routines, a critical part of which involves completely stripping the aircraft’s paint. According to internal communications recently highlighted on the Boeing News Network (BNN), aerospace engineers have successfully implemented advanced, environmentally friendly chemical paint stripping formulas designed to solve a persistent and dangerous maintenance issue: fuselage pitting.
Historically, the aviation industry has relied on harsh, highly toxic chemicals to remove tough aerospace coatings. While these legacy chemicals were effective at breaking down heavy polyurethane and epoxy paints, they often caused localized corrosion on the aircraft’s aluminum skin and high-strength steel components. By transitioning to pH-neutral and alkaline-activated formulas, engineers are extending aircraft lifespans while simultaneously protecting worker health and the environment.
To understand the significance of this engineering achievement, we must look at the routine maintenance cycle of commercial fleets. Aircraft are not simply stripped of their paint for cosmetic rebranding. According to industry maintenance standards, commercial aircraft must be stripped of their paint every five to six years to fulfill strict regulatory requirements. Removing the paint allows safety inspectors to examine the bare metal fuselage for micro-fractures, metal fatigue, and structural flaws that would otherwise remain hidden beneath layers of epoxy.
During these routine stripping processes, aircraft are vulnerable to fuselage pitting. Pitting is a highly localized form of corrosion that creates microscopic cavities or “holes” in the metal substrate. In aviation, pitting is incredibly dangerous. These microscopic cavities act as stress concentrators, which can eventually lead to stress corrosion cracking and severe metal fatigue under the extreme pressurization and depressurization cycles of flight.
While pitting can occur naturally due to environmental moisture and salt exposure, a major historical cause during maintenance was the use of highly acidic chemical paint strippers. These chemicals would inadvertently etch and corrode the aluminum cladding of the fuselage while removing the paint.
For decades, the industry standard for removing tough aerospace coatings was Methylene Chloride (DCM) combined with phenol activators. However, methylene chloride is a highly volatile and toxic solvent. Due to severe health risks to maintenance workers, including respiratory failure and nervous system damage, agencies such as the EPA and OSHA have heavily restricted its use.
Furthermore, to accelerate the stripping process, many legacy formulas were highly acidic. Evaluations conducted by NASA and the Department of Defense (DoD) found that these legacy acidic strippers actively promoted pitting, localized attacks on non-clad aluminum substrates, and hydrogen embrittlement in high-strength steel components. “The latest engineering breakthrough involves the use of pH-neutral or alkaline-activated benzyl alcohol formulas… eliminating chemically-induced fuselage pitting, improving aircraft lifespan, and protecting worker health.”
To resolve both the environmental hazards and the structural threats posed by legacy chemicals, aerospace engineers and chemical manufacturers developed a new generation of paint strippers. According to the engineering data surrounding the Boeing announcement, these new formulas primarily utilize benzyl alcohol activated by hydrogen peroxide or alkaline agents. Benzyl alcohol serves as a non-toxic, environmentally friendly solvent.
Unlike their acidic predecessors, these new formulas are engineered to be pH-neutral or slightly alkaline. Extensive testing has demonstrated that alkaline and neutral strippers produce zero visible etching, pitting, or corrosion on aluminum aircraft skins. Furthermore, engineers have formulated these new strippers as high-viscosity gels. This thick consistency allows the chemical to cling to the vertical sides of the fuselage for hours without evaporating or running off. The extended dwell time gives the gentler chemicals enough time to break the chemical bonds of the paint without requiring aggressive mechanical scraping, which is another common cause of mechanical pitting.
The internal BNN article highlights Boeing’s rigorous internal engineering efforts and approvals regarding these new formulas. Boeing maintains strict engineering standards for any chemical applied to its aircraft, most notably the Boeing D6-17487 standard for chemical paint strippers. To meet this standard, a new formula must definitively prove that it does not cause hydrogen embrittlement, does not corrode magnesium or aluminum, and leaves no residue behind.
Boeing’s Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MRO) engineering teams continuously test new chemical blends to find the perfect operational balance: a formula strong enough to strip cross-linked epoxy paints efficiently, yet gentle enough to guarantee zero pitting on the fuselage.
At AirPro News, we view the transition away from Methylene Chloride as a critical milestone for the aerospace Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MRO) sector. Passengers generally only see the cosmetic result of a newly painted plane, completely unaware of the complex chemical engineering required to safely remove old paint without dissolving the airplane’s skin. This development is not merely a cosmetic fix; it is a fundamental structural safety measure. By eliminating toxic legacy solvents, aerospace manufacturers are achieving a dual victory: protecting their maintenance workforce from hazardous fumes and preventing microscopic structural failures at high altitudes. This aligns perfectly with the industry’s broader push toward sustainable and safe operational practices.
Sources:
The Hidden Danger of Fuselage Pitting
Why Aircraft Shed Their Skin
The Chemical Catalyst for Corrosion
Transitioning Away from Legacy Chemicals
Environmental and Health Hazards
The Engineering Solution: Benzyl Alcohol Formulas
How the New Gels Work
Meeting Strict Aerospace Standards
AirPro News analysis
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Fuselage pitting is a localized form of corrosion that creates microscopic cavities in the metal of an aircraft. These cavities can act as stress concentrators, leading to metal fatigue and cracking under the pressure changes of flight.
Aircraft are stripped of their paint every five to six years to comply with regulatory safety inspections. Removing the paint allows engineers to inspect the bare metal for micro-fractures and structural flaws.
The new formulas use pH-neutral or alkaline-activated benzyl alcohol instead of toxic Methylene Chloride. They are formulated as high-viscosity gels that cling to the aircraft, safely breaking down paint without chemically etching the aluminum or harming worker health.
Boeing News Network (BNN)
Photo Credit: Boeing
MRO & Manufacturing
Delta TechOps Expands CFM LEAP Engine Overhaul Capabilities
Delta TechOps becomes the first North American MRO to fully support CFM LEAP-1A and LEAP-1B engines, expanding its maintenance services.
This article is based on an official press release from Delta Air Lines.
Delta TechOps has officially become the first and only North American airline maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) provider licensed to support both the CFM LEAP-1A and LEAP-1B engines. According to a recent press release from Delta Air Lines, the company has added full overhaul capabilities for the LEAP-1A model, expanding its existing engine maintenance portfolio.
This development positions Delta TechOps to service a rapidly growing segment of the global narrowbody fleet. The LEAP engine family, manufactured by CFM International, is a critical component of modern commercial aviation, powering some of the most widely used next-generation aircraft in the world.
By securing full capability for both engine variants, Delta aims to solidify its standing as a premier MRO partner. The move reflects a broader industry trend of airlines investing heavily in in-house and third-party maintenance infrastructure to meet surging demand for narrowbody jet operations and aftermarket support.
Delta TechOps and CFM International share a collaborative history spanning more than 40 years. The airline’s MRO division has extensive experience transitioning from the legacy CFM56 engines to the advanced LEAP family. In 2022, Delta TechOps achieved a significant milestone when it was named a CFM Premier MRO provider for LEAP-1B engines, becoming the first North American MRO to earn that specific designation.
The addition of the LEAP-1A overhaul capability further deepens this relationship. CFM International leadership emphasized the importance of an open MRO ecosystem to support global operators.
“Both CFM and Delta are deeply committed to an innovative and open MRO ecosystem. Delta was one of our first and remains one of our biggest customers, and we are forever linked in history,” stated Gaël Méheust, president and CEO of CFM International, in the press release.
The CFM LEAP engine family is central to the future of narrowbody aviation. The LEAP-1A variant powers the Airbus A320neo family, while the LEAP-1B serves as the exclusive powerplant for the Boeing 737 MAX 10. Delta Air Lines has a vested interest in the latter, having ordered 100 Boeing 737 MAX 10 aircraft, with deliveries pending certification.
As the global fleet expands, the operational footprint of the LEAP line continues to scale rapidly. According to the Delta press release, the engine line has accumulated over 95 million flight hours and 41 million flight cycles across more than 150 customers worldwide. Furthermore, cumulative deliveries of installed and spare LEAP engines surpassed 8,000 units as of February 2026. “With LEAP engines now representing a significant and fast growing share of the global narrowbody fleet, adding full capability on both 1A and 1B models positions Delta TechOps squarely at the center of where the market is headed,” noted Alain Bellemare, President of Delta International and chairman of Delta TechOps.
We view Delta TechOps’ expansion into full LEAP-1A and LEAP-1B overhaul capabilities as a strategic maneuver to capture a larger share of the lucrative third-party MRO market. As supply chain constraints and maintenance backlogs continue to challenge the aviation sector, having a North American provider with dual-capability offers a vital relief valve for operators.
Furthermore, Delta’s investment in servicing the engines that power both the Airbus A320neo and Boeing 737 MAX families ensures long-term revenue streams independent of its own fleet operations. With over 8,000 LEAP engines delivered globally, the aftermarket demand for maintenance and overhauls will only intensify over the next decade.
Delta TechOps is now the first and only North American airline MRO provider licensed to offer full support and overhaul capabilities for both the CFM LEAP-1A and LEAP-1B engines.
The CFM LEAP-1A engine powers the Airbus A320neo family, while the LEAP-1B is the exclusive engine for the Boeing 737 MAX series, including the MAX 10.
According to Delta’s press release, as of February 2026, more than 8,000 installed and spare LEAP engines have been delivered globally, accumulating over 95 million flight hours.
Delta TechOps Expands CFM LEAP Engine Capabilities
Strategic Growth in the MRO Market
Strengthening the CFM Partnership
Meeting Narrowbody Demand
AirPro News analysis
What This Means for the Industry
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What makes Delta TechOps’ new capability significant?
Which aircraft use the CFM LEAP engines?
How large is the CFM LEAP engine fleet?
Sources
Photo Credit: Delta TechOps
MRO & Manufacturing
Daher and Hexcel Fast Cure RTM Cuts Aerospace Lead Times
Daher and Hexcel demonstrate Fast Cure RTM process reducing aerospace composite part production lead times from 19 to 8 days with rapid-curing resins.
This article is based on an official press release from Daher.
The commercial aviation sector is currently facing a massive backlog of aircraft orders, placing unprecedented pressure on the supply chain to produce composite parts faster than ever before. On March 3, 2026, French aerospace manufacturers Daher announced a significant industrial breakthrough designed to address this exact bottleneck. Through a collaborative trial with advanced composites company Hexcel, Daher successfully demonstrated a “Fast Cure” Resin Transfer Molding (RTM) process that drastically accelerates production rates.
According to the official press release, this new methodology allows aerospace-grade composite parts to be manufactured at high speeds without the traditional requirement of multiplying expensive, large-scale manufacturing equipment. By shifting the focus from expanding physical infrastructure to accelerating the chemical curing process, the partnership has provided a viable pathway for scaling up production for next-generation Short and Medium Range (SMR) aircraft.
The results of the trial are striking. Daher reports that the Fast Cure process can reduce series production lead times for specific components from 19 days down to just eight days, fundamentally altering the industrial math for aerospace Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs).
The aerospace industry relies heavily on composite materials, such as carbon fiber, to reduce overall aircraft weight, improve fuel efficiency, and lower carbon emissions. However, traditional composite manufacturing processes are notoriously slow and resource-intensive. Standard Resin Transfer Molding (RTM), which involves injecting liquid resin into a closed mold containing a dry fiber preform and heating it to polymerize, provides excellent automation and complex geometric capabilities, but it struggles to meet modern volume demands.
Industry estimates indicate that some aircraft OEMs are targeting unprecedented production rates, occasionally aiming for up to 100 aircraft per month. Scaling up a standard RTM process to meet these high rates typically requires a brute-force industrial approach: investing in dozens of molds and multiple large heating ovens or massive autoclaves. This traditional method creates severe production bottlenecks and requires massive capital expenditure.
To break the cycle of simply buying more equipment to build more parts, Daher shifted its engineering focus to the manufacturing cycle itself. At the end of 2025, the company temporarily diverted production preforms and injection tooling from their standard serial production flow to test two specialized “Fast Cure” resins developed by Hexcel. According to the provided research data, Hexcel has spent recent years refining these rapid-cure, all-liquid format resins specifically to reduce takt time in high-rate aerospace manufacturing.
The trial utilized two specific Hexcel materials: The technological enabler of this successful trial was the implementation of isothermal injection. Daher’s engineers injected the resin at a constant temperature of 180 °C, followed immediately by a short curing phase and hot demolding. Hot demolding allows the composite part to be removed from the mold quickly, facilitating a rapid sequencing of operations that standard processes cannot match.
“By utilizing hot demolding and rapid curing, it becomes possible to process thermoset composites with the speed and agility typically reserved for thermoplastic materials.” Daher’s official release notes that the trial resulted in the successful manufacturing of six “production-type” parts, five utilizing the HF640 resin and one utilizing the HF610 resin. During the process, resin injection times were successfully kept below two minutes.
Crucially, speed did not compromise quality. The demonstrator parts were reintegrated into the plant’s standard downstream processes. Subsequent machining, ultrasonic non-destructive inspection, and geometric conformity checks revealed that the Fast Cure parts were entirely equivalent in quality to those manufactured using the slower, reference process.
The most compelling data points from the trial relate to industrial scalability. At very high production rates, Daher projects that a standard process would require over 30 molds and five ovens. By implementing the Fast Cure process, tooling requirements could be divided by eight, requiring only two molds and two mini-presses to achieve the same output.
Furthermore, the overall lead time for series production of these components could be slashed from 19 days at full rate under the standard process to just eight days using the Fast Cure methodology.
We view this development as a critical enabler for the broader aerospace supply chain. The global Resin Transfer Molding in Aerospace market was valued at approximately $1.73 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 9.2% through 2033, according to industry market-analysis. This growth is heavily dependent on the exact type of cost-efficient, high-performance manufacturing processes that Daher and Hexcel are pioneering.
Beyond raw speed, the Fast Cure process offers a vital strategic advantage: flexibility. Because the process relies on smaller, less permanent infrastructure, such as mini-presses rather than massive, fixed ovens, manufacturers gain the agility to reallocate equipment to different aircraft programs as market demands fluctuate. While the parts produced in this specific trial were non-airworthy demonstrators, this successful proof of concept lays the necessary groundwork for official certification and widespread industry adoption in the coming years.
RTM is a manufacturing process where liquid resin is injected into a closed mold containing dry fibers (like carbon fiber). The mold is then heated to cure the resin, creating a strong, lightweight composite part commonly used in aerospace.
According to Daher’s trial data, the Fast Cure process reduces the series production lead time for specific components from 19 days to 8 days, while utilizing resins that cure in as little as 15 to 30 minutes. Not yet. The parts produced in this trial were non-airworthy demonstrators used to prove the industrial viability of the process. This successful trial paves the way for future official qualification for flight.
Sources:
The Aerospace Production Bottleneck
The Demand for Composites
Scaling Challenges
Daher and Hexcel’s “Fast Cure” Innovation
Accelerating the Chemistry
The Isothermal Process
, Industry research summarizing the philosophical shift in Daher’s manufacturing approach.
Hard Data: Proving Industrial Scalability
Trial Results and Quality Assurance
Equipment and Lead Time Reductions
AirPro News analysis
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is Resin Transfer Molding (RTM)?
How much faster is Daher’s Fast Cure process?
Are these Fast Cure parts currently flying on commercial aircraft?
Daher Official Press Release: Fast Cure & Furious
AirPro News Industry Research & Market Context Report
Photo Credit: Daher
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