DocumentCode
2864473
Title
An analytical model for predicting the impact of maintenance resource allocation on air traffic control system availability
Author
Hecht, Myron ; Handal, Jady
Author_Institution
SoHaR Inc., Beverly Hills, CA, USA
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
46
Lastpage
52
Abstract
With the increasing air traffic and growth of deployed FAA equipment, high equipment availability and low outage time is also becoming more important. While the use of simulation models and simple queuing models for assessing the impact of staffing on availability has been available for more than 5 decades, it has not been widely used because of the cost and complexity of implementation. This paper presents an analytical model and software tool that can be used by nonexperts to relate FAA maintenance resources including staffing, training, shift allocation, and geographical deployment to National Airspace System (NAS) facility and service downtime and availability. The analytical methodology and tool presented in this paper make it possible for any user to rapidly assess how changes in staffing, training, equipment count, and reliability will impact outage time, availability, maintenance backlog and technician utilization. It allows users to easily perform parametric studies on a variety of “what if” scenarios related to economics and capacity. The most significant benefit is that these results can now be made available to analysts and decision makers. The net result will be more informed decisions that account for the impact of maintenance resources on NAS capacity and overall economics
Keywords
air traffic control; maintenance engineering; personnel; queueing theory; resource allocation; training; FAA equipment; FAA maintenance resources; Federal Aviation Administration; National Airspace System; air traffic control system availability; availability; decision makers; economics; geographical deployment; high equipment availability; low outage time; maintenance backlog; maintenance resource allocation; outage time; parametric studies; queuing models; service downtime; shift allocation; simulation models; software tool; staffing; technician utilization; training; Analytical models; Availability; Costs; Discrete event simulation; Equations; FAA; Queueing analysis; Resource management; Traffic control; Watches;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 2001. Proceedings. Annual
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
ISSN
0149-144X
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6615-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RAMS.2001.902440
Filename
902440
Link To Document