bell helicopter textron canada and its supplier · pdf filebell helicopter textron canada and...
TRANSCRIPT
© 2003 Textron Inc. Bell Proprietary
Bell Helicopter Textron Canada and its Supplier
IAQG 07-Oct-05
Rénald Robert , Director Quality, BHTCL
2© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
Total revenues of US$10 Billion44,000 Employees, 40 countries
FinancialIndustrial• E-Z-GO• Jacobsen• Kautex• Greenlee• Fluid & Power
Bell Helicopter Cessna• Textron Systems• Lycoming
Fastening Systems• Cherry• Avdel• Torx• Sükosim
Lewis Campbell
Jack J. PeltonM. Redenbaugh R. ClaytonB. Olson Ted French
3© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
Mirabel – Commercial models
Bristol, Tn - Customizing
Fort Worth – Head office and military models
Amarillo – Tiltrotors
BELL HELICOPTER PRODUCTION SITES
4© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
• Aerial view of Bell, Mirabel
• Canadian Government issued SOI in 1980
• Opened in 1986• Focus on commercial helicopters• 1,700 employees• 3000+ helicopters produced
• Canadian Government issued SOI in 1980
• Opened in 1986• Focus on commercial helicopters• 1,700 employees• 3000+ helicopters produced
5© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
Supply Centers (4)Customer Service Facilities (180+)Customer Support Representatives (55)
6© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
• US Marines and Air Force Special Operation Command primary customer
• US Marines and Air Force Special Operation Command primary customer
• Over 500 aircraft on order• Over 500 aircraft on order
• Technology developed over 25 years• Technology developed over 25 years
V22
7© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
• Speed: 135 Knots
• Range: 314 NM
• 7 Place Seating
8© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
• Range: 365 NM (target)• 8 Place Seating
• Speed: 142 Knots (target)
10© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
“Suppliers Conference”
Communication ForumAnnual Event (next Nov 1-2)
Sharing Business OutlookRoll-Out Initiatives
Supplier Recognition
Increased Business
Supply-Base
Perform
ance Improvement
Together…To be The Premier Vertical-Lift Aircraft Company…
Number One
Fly To WinSUPPLIER VERTICAL-LIFT
11© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
•• ASAS--9100 will be the common Quality standard9100 will be the common Quality standard
Bell Quality reps trained and certified as ASBell Quality reps trained and certified as AS--9100 auditors9100 auditors
•• Supplier Quality Surveys being shared amongst TACSupplier Quality Surveys being shared amongst TAC
Common Data locationCommon Data location
••
Textron Aerospace Companies (TAC)
Bell Helicopter Textron Inc, Bell Helicopter Canada, Cessna Aircraft Company
12© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
AS9100 Mandate
January 1, 2006, supplier quality system certification to AS9100 will become a contractual requirement for on-going business with Bell
• QPS-approved manufacturers must have a plan in place to achieve certification by January 1, 2007 • Only certifications issued by Certification/Registration Bodies (CRBs) will be considered as satisfactory
Letter of Intention was distributed recently (Aug-05) • Submit plan to transition by September 30, 2005• Responses will help us forecast the resources we need to help make the transition.
AS9100 is the aerospace industry’s quality system standard for quality assurance in design, development, production, installation, and servicing
• ISO9001 enhanced for aerospace requirements
13© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
National Aerospace and Defense Contractors Accreditation Program (NADCAP)
Implementation for QPS-101 processors in three (3) phases
Phase OneHeat Treat (HT) and Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) processes.Phase TwoChemical Processing (CP) processes.Phase threeWelding (WLD), Material Testing (MTL), and Shot Peening (NMSE) by December 30, 2005.
Number of redundant audits will be reduced
Bell will augment NADCAP audits with additional assessments as the need arises
NADCAP RolloutNADCAP Rollout
14© 2005 Textron Inc. Propriété de Bell Helicopter
Suppliers – How Can You Improve?
Bell Helicopter (along with the industry) estimates that 80% of escapes occur:
1. Supplier Oversight of Sub-tiers through the entire chain
2. Change in a process without assessing new capability or FAI• Machine, people, geographic location, etc
3. Special Processing – assuring requirements are met