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What makes this course unique? Are you exploring aviation as a career path? Do you aim to pursue a Part 66 Aircraft Maintenance License? Would you prefer training from an institution with over nine decades of experience in educating aircraft maintenance and management professionals for the worldwide aviation sector? This distinctive program stands alone in Scotland, crafted to develop graduate-level aircraft maintenance engineers. The BSc (Hons) Aircraft Maintenance Engineering and Management aligns with the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and UK Civil Aviation Authority (UKCAA) Category B1.1 aircraft maintenance license syllabus (EASA Part-66). Offered in partnership with Air Service Training (Eng) Ltd, the world's longest-running aviation maintenance training provider, it enables you to earn both an honors degree and an approved EASA/UKCAA Part 66 Certificate of Recognition. This certificate reduces the required aircraft maintenance experience before applying for a license. Earning a Category B1.1 license is the initial milestone toward becoming a certified aircraft engineer, authorized to approve maintenance work on aircraft systems. Instructors with military and civilian industry expertise deliver the program, blending academic knowledge with technical skills and leadership qualities essential for this fast-paced field. What career paths open after completing this course? Graduates can advance their careers in aviation, especially in aircraft maintenance.
The main career path is becoming a licensed aircraft maintenance engineer, categorized as: B1.1 Fixed Wing: Turbine-engine airplanes - Turbine engines (commonly called jet engines or combustion turbines) are rotary engines harnessing combustion gas energy, featuring a compressor, turbine, and combustion chamber. These power propeller or jet aircraft. B1.2 Fixed Wing: Piston-engine airplanes - Piston engines (or reciprocating engines) operate similarly to automotive engines, converting pressure into rotational motion to drive propellers. B1.3 Rotary Wing: Turbine-engine helicopters - This license permits mechanical engineers to perform base maintenance on turbine-powered helicopters, including engines, fuel systems, and related pneumatic/hydraulic systems. B1.4 Rotary Wing: Piston-engine helicopters - This qualification authorizes engineers to conduct base maintenance on piston-powered helicopters and their associated systems.
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Advanced entry to year three:
IELTS: Overall score of 6.0 with no element below 5.5. TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) iBT: Min 78 or above with min 18 in each section.