Automation Tools for NonDestructive Inspection of Aircraft: Promise of Technology Transfer from the Civilian to the Military Sector - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Automation Tools for NonDestructive Inspection of Aircraft: Promise of Technology Transfer from the Civilian to the Military Sector

Chris Seher, Mel Siegel, and William M. Kaufman
Conference Paper, Proceedings of 4th Annual IEEE Dual-Use Technologies and Applications Conference: Promise of Technology Transfer from the Civilian to the Military Sector, March, 1994

Abstract

The FAA Aging Aircraft Research Program is supporting the development of a robotic mobile
nondestructive inspection (NDI) instrument deployment tool at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) with the active participation of USAir. The program has spawned several new relationships and entities: an alliance with an ARPA-funded research program at CMU having the capability to add 3D-stereoscopic enhanced visual inspection capability, a start-up company organized to commercialize the combined technologies, and State of Pennsylvania funding to foster this commercialization. As a result of these activities and connections the civilian sector appears to be ahead of the military sector in important aspects of automation for deployment of aircraft inspection equipment. A partnership between the university
researchers, the airline operator, the start-up company, and the state government is thus
emerging as the likely agent for transfer of the civilian-developed technology to the military sector.

BibTeX

@conference{Seher-1994-127764,
author = {Chris Seher and Mel Siegel and William M. Kaufman},
title = {Automation Tools for NonDestructive Inspection of Aircraft: Promise of Technology Transfer from the Civilian to the Military Sector},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 4th Annual IEEE Dual-Use Technologies and Applications Conference: Promise of Technology Transfer from the Civilian to the Military Sector},
year = {1994},
month = {March},
}