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Install and align repaired or replacement parts for subsequent riveting or welding, using clamps and wrenches.
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Inventory and requisition or order supplies, parts, materials, and equipment.
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Clean, strip, prime, and sand structural surfaces and materials to prepare them for bonding.
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Check for corrosion, distortion, and invisible cracks in the fuselage, wings, and tail, using x-ray and magnetic inspection equipment.
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Remove, inspect, repair, and install in-flight refueling stores and external fuel tanks.
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Listen to operating engines to detect and diagnose malfunctions, such as sticking or burned valves.
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Cure bonded structures, using portable or stationary curing equipment.
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Service and maintain aircraft and related apparatus by performing activities such as flushing crankcases, cleaning screens, and or moving parts.
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Determine repair limits for engine hot section parts.
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Inspect completed work to certify that maintenance meets standards and that aircraft are ready for operation.
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Spread plastic film over areas to be repaired to prevent damage to surrounding areas.
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Remove or install aircraft engines, using hoists or forklift trucks.
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Read and interpret pilots' descriptions of problems to diagnose causes.
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Read and interpret maintenance manuals, service bulletins, and other specifications to determine the feasibility and method of repairing or replacing malfunctioning or damaged components.
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Maintain repair logs, documenting all preventive and corrective aircraft maintenance.
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Clean engines, sediment bulk and screens, and carburetors, adjusting carburetor float levels.
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Measure the tension of control cables.
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Accompany aircraft on flights to make in-flight adjustments and corrections.
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Fabricate defective sections or parts, using metal fabricating machines, saws, brakes, shears, and grinders.
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Examine and inspect aircraft components, including landing gear, hydraulic systems, and deicers to locate cracks, breaks, leaks, or other problems.
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Disassemble engines and inspect parts, such as turbine blades or cylinders, for corrosion, wear, warping, cracks, and leaks, using precision measuring instruments, x-rays, and magnetic inspection equipment.
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Clean, refuel, and change oil in line service aircraft.
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Examine engines through specially designed openings while working from ladders or scaffolds, or use hoists or lifts to remove the entire engine from an aircraft.
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Prepare and paint aircraft surfaces.
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Communicate with other workers to coordinate fitting and alignment of heavy parts, or to facilitate processing of repair parts.
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Conduct routine and special inspections as required by regulations.
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Obtain fuel and oil samples and check them for contamination.
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Test operation of engines and other systems, using test equipment, such as ignition analyzers, compression checkers, distributor timers, or ammeters.
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Inspect airframes for wear or other defects.
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Locate and mark dimensions and reference lines on defective or replacement parts, using templates, scribes, compasses, and steel rules.
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Trim and shape replacement body sections to specified sizes and fits and secure sections in place, using adhesives, hand tools, and power tools.
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Replace or repair worn, defective, or damaged components, using hand tools, gauges, and testing equipment.
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Modify aircraft structures, space vehicles, systems, or components, following drawings, schematics, charts, engineering orders, and technical publications.
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Maintain, repair, and rebuild aircraft structures, functional components, and parts, such as wings and fuselage, rigging, hydraulic units, oxygen systems, fuel systems, electrical systems, gaskets, or seals.
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Measure parts for wear, using precision instruments.
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Reassemble engines following repair or inspection and reinstall engines in aircraft.
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Assemble and install electrical, plumbing, mechanical, hydraulic, and structural components and accessories, using hand or power tools.
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Remove or cut out defective parts or drill holes to gain access to internal defects or damage, using drills and punches.