Press Release March 2006

AirLog Imaging LLC approaches 100 aircraft on V2.0.
Since August 2005 over seventy-five aircraft have been placed on the LBCD V2.0 software program. V2.0 is a complete aircraft document scanning; indexing, searching and viewing program that literally reduces aircraft document research time from days to minutes. Customers using V2.0 have complete control of their documents and are not required to ship their documents or access the Internet to update the program. In my opinion the reasons that V2.0 is a success is that we designed and adapt LBCD V2.0 with our customers input in mind so the program is truly designed by and for aviation professionals said Michael Head, President, AirLog Imaging LLC. Also, we are seeing a dramatic increase in inquiries and sales due to the demands of companies for disaster recovery software to protect their assets, which in this case is the value of their aircraft. By request we also offer on-site scanning which has taken us to Florida, Alaska, and Coast to Coast. For the customer, on-site scanning means they start off on V2.0 up to date and their records never leave their office.

TEL: 334-566-9890
airlogimaging.com

Aviation Maintenance Nov. 2005

Saving Precious Data
….But the companies that specialize in this service add value to the result by indexing the information. If a company, for example, is performing a prepurchase inspection on an aircraft, it’s easy to provide digital files that the inspector can search through to establish the maintenance history. The feature also saves maintainers tons of time when searching for AD compliance, part replacement times and other critical airworthiness information.

AIN 2005

AirLog Imaging Software Lets Users Take Control
AirLog Imaging is offering a Version II of its LBCD (Logbooks on CD). LBCD software Version I included search and view-only capabilities; Version II is a complete aircraft document scanning and indexing software program. The program has a password-protected maintenance data tab that activates the scanning and indexing capabilities. One of the benefits of the program is that documents never have to leave the operator’s home base and records can be backed up in real time, eliminating the need for a revision service.

Version II search features include an alphanumeric listing of all indexed items that allow users to find any document in seconds. In addition, the user can create read-only CDs to send to maintenance facilities for document review. The software is sold on a per-aircraft basis and comes complete with the customer’s aircraft information already set up.

HAI Convention News 2002

Vol.34 No.5 Feb 16, 2002
AirLog Imaging’s Logbooks on CD cut Inspection
The capabilities of AirLog Imaging’s Logbooks on CD (LBCD) program were demonstrated during a pre-purchase inspection of Weyerhaeuser’s five year old Falcon 2000 at the Dassault Service Center in Little Rock, Ark. AirLog (Booth No. 639) noted this was the first such inspection in which all the aircraft records were duplicated and stored on an LBCD. The work was performed last December on a fixed-wing design; the same approach could be used on helicopter models.

Business and Commercial Aviation 2002

Weyerhaeuser marked a first when it sold its
five- year old Falcon 2000 with all its records entirely on CD-ROM. In December, the forest products company delivered the aircraft to Dassault’s Little Rock, Ark. Service center for a pre-purchase inspection. The company had scheduled two weeks for the process, but the inspection was completed and the sale consummated in just three days. Weyerhaeuser used AirLog Imaging of Lexington KY, to transfer the records to CD-ROM with a word search program that allowed detailed research of the entire life of the aircraft, Larry Warwick, Weyerhaeuser’s manager of aircraft maintenance said, “We carried all of our records ever created for the Falcon in a briefcase. We were able to research all the aircraft Ads, S.B.s etc in a matter of hours versus what normally takes days.

AIN 2002

A Different Approach
AirLog Imaging takes an entirely different approach to maintenance logs. AirLog organizes, duplicates and allows complete research of every page, tag, work order, work card and all other critical airworthiness documents that have accumulated for the aircraft. They are all copied and reduced to a CD-ROM. The company developed its own software that allows the user to view the page of original records in a Windows-based program. Any document can be located in a variety of different ways: by opening the appropriate file folder, searching by key word or locating it in a list of indexes.

Mx Magazine Fall 2001

Volume 1 issue no.4
Gulfstream Aerospace, Wis, conducted the first complete logbook review for a maintenance inspection using electronic aircraft records on an AirLog Imaging-prepared CD-ROM. He inspection was a 12-month/600 hour inspection of one of U.S. Filter’s Hawker 800 XPs. The maintenance professional using the CD noted the ease with which he found records, which was one of the reasons that U.S. Filter decided to use the AirLog program for its corporate fleet.

Mx Magazine Summer 2001

Volume 1 issue no.3
The Corsair will fly again
"The strict adherence to FAA regulations, the use of only approved parts, and the conscientious attention to detail would be diminished if there were not proper documentation. Through PAMA, I learned of AirLog Imaging’s digital record keeping system. Our logbooks go back to 1945 and need some work! We are using AirLog to have every receipt, yellow tag, inspection report, statement of conformity, and logbook entry digitally entered in a system that organizes all of the records on CDs."