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cypilot77
1st May 2007, 02:41
hey people. i was wondering if any of you did a graduate aviation thesis. I have to do one and im looking for some ideas about the topic. I can choose any topic i want but im trying to find something that i will be able to collect as much info as i can. SO any ideas are welcome. thanks

Re-Heat
1st May 2007, 10:59
Engineering? Economics? Management? What are you studying exactly? You can't just write a thesis without a specialism.

cypilot77
1st May 2007, 13:45
Its an MBA degree, but i want to do something related with aviation safety or flight operations.

Re-Heat
1st May 2007, 16:52
Why don't you do Texas Pacific's turnaround of Continental or something similar - financial engineering or operational improvements & key takeaways?

I can't see the direct relevance of flight safety to an MBA - only indirect through management attitudes, but have a look on Cranfield's website to see if anyone has done anything similar in the past perhaps?

old,not bold
1st May 2007, 20:51
Here's one I'll never finish, but wanted to....

The trend in gross revenue per flight hour among traditional airlines and LoCos world-wide over the period 1990 - 2005, seen against the trends in DOC's world-wide; ie what was the money spent on, in what proportions, in 1990, and what is it spent on now, in what proportions.

I did enough on this about two years ago to reveal some very startling information; seat capacities and load factors went up while fares went down, and gross revenues per flight hour fell dramatically. At the same time fuel and crew costs went up, as did airport charges, on route charges and handling. Ownership and insurance costs went up, by and large, although clever lease & buy back deals offset that. Depreciation was extended by the bean counters to unrealsitic periods (50 years in one case) to make things look better.

What's left? Why, maintenance, of course. Parts went up, leaving maintenance labour as the only cost that could be reduced to a fraction of the share it used to have of income, without anyone noticing. So fully-qualified C licensed engineers are working at rates that would make the local garage owner blush. Unlicensed fitters and mechanics, with good experience and qualifications, are getting the same as road sweepers.

And that's why the biggest challenge the industry faces, after environmental concerns, is how to manage when the last well-trained engineer has locked the hangar door, switched the light off, and got a job on the railway.

I hope I've whetted your appetite; things have moved on but there's some really interesting data locked away there to dig out and analyse. What's more, no-one else has really done it, as far as I know, and the results of the research could have a real impact.

Sorry, that turned into a rant, almost! But it is fascinating.