European aviation regulators have determined that an obscure London-based company supplied bogus parts for repairs of jet engines that power many older-generation Airbus A320 and Boeing 737 planes.
Distributor AOG Technics is accused of a years-long scheme of selling fake aircraft parts to airlines. Major US airlines say they found bogus components sourced from the company on their CFM56 engines ...
PARIS, Oct 4 (Reuters) - Jet engine maker CFM International said on Wednesday the number of engines suspected of containing falsely documented parts from a UK distributor had risen to 126, including ...
Powerplant manufacturer CFM International has identified 126 engines, including a number in its overhaul facilities, which contain parts sourced from AOG Technics – the company embroiled in ...
United Airlines has confirmed that it has found suspicious engine parts of the London-based supplier AOG Technics, and it is the third large U.S. carrier to be publicly affected by a company-wide ...
A British company that manufactures components for the most widely used jet airliner engine has been found to be distributing fake parts. London-based AOG Technics forged “numerous” Authorised Release ...
CFM International said more than half of 145 jet engines presumed to have parts with forged documentation from a U.K. supplier were removed from service, Reuters reported Tuesday. AOG Technics last ...
LONDON, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Jet engine maker CFM International said on Wednesday thousands of engine components may have been sold with forged paperwork by a British distributor, as the fallout from a ...
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General Electric (NYSE:GE) and Safran (OTCPK:SAFRY) on Wednesday increased the number of jet engines they identified as having fake safety documents from 96 to 126. Sixteen of those were found in the ...