Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Search
70.6 F
Salt Lake City
Monday, September 15, 2025
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contests
  • About The Globe
    • Staff
    • Jobs
    • Issue PDFs
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy Policy
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
The Globe The Globe
The Globe The Globe
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Home News Campus Aviation Maintenance keeps the skies running
  • News
  • Campus
  • Don't Miss

Aviation Maintenance keeps the skies running

By
Brandon Crowley
-
September 14, 2011
0
Todd Baird in the hangar with aviation students
Todd Baird is the Department Coordinator and an Aviation Maintenance Instructor at Salt Lake Community College. (Tyler Alexander)

Salt Lake Community College offers a variety of technical degrees and certifications for those with a knack for engines and body repair. In one program offered, the engines are jet turbine and the bodywork is with carbon fiber.

The Aviation Maintenance Technician program, located at the SLCC Airport Center, has been teaching students the fundamentals of aircraft systems since the early 1980’s.

“SLCC is a great school. They have live equipment, they have modern equipment. The labs are set up and secured with modern technology,” said Todd Baird, program coordinator for Aviation Maintenance. “When a student comes here for airframe and powerplant training, they’re fairly well rounded when they get done. They’ve touched a lot of areas that most technician training doesn’t give them an opportunity to do.”

The educational path begins with concepts and theory, such as electrical systems and basic physics and builds from there. Students soon find themselves overhauling reciprocating propeller engines.

“By the time they’re done with the course, they will know how to disassemble an engine, and know every piece, internal and external. They’ll know how the combustion process works, how the torque process works, how much horsepower an engine can produce and fuel consumption,” said Baird. “From there they go the turbine lab, where we teach the students how to tear down turbine engines: turbo jets, turbo shafts, turbo prop engines. How to tear ‘em down, reassemble them, and then we test run them on an engine stand.”

Aircraft maintenance isn’t all about engines. There are many components of an aircraft which need to be regularly inspected, maintained and repaired, not the least of which is the airframe itself. This is where the Airport Center’s location becomes an advantage.

Straddling the border of the Salt Lake City International Airport, the Airport Center’s hangar is home to a small fleet of functional (but grounded) aircraft. Students get firsthand experience with inspection and repair of airframes, flight control cables, fly-by-wire, cockpits, oxygen pressure systems, brakes and electrical systems.

The faculty teaching these courses is a mix of veteran educators and industry professionals.

“We have two senior faculty members who have been here a long time who keep the program grounded. Plus we have three instructors who have very recent industry experience in sheet metal, airframe systems and turbine engine and recip engine technology courses. We have a fresh look, and we have a fresh knowledge base,” said Baird.

Like many of SLCC’s Career and Technical Education programs, students of Aviation Maintenance can opt to go after an industry recognized technical certification, or pursue a more traditional academic degree.

“You can come here and get certificated, which means the FAA will allow you to test to be an A&P (airframe and powerplant) Technician. Or you can become matriculated and go on to get an associate degree, with credits which are transferable to a university. You could go on to get a maintenance technology bachelor’s degree,” said Baird.

For students who are curious about a education in aviation maintenance but aren’t quite ready to make a commitment, Baird offers an option:

“Reciprocating Engine Principles does not have a prerequisite, so you can just come in and enroll in that,” said Baird. We cover the whole semester of basic engine technology: fuel systems, lube systems, hydraulics, internal combustion engine, some jet engine. Basic stuff, and you can get a great idea [of what the program has to offer].”

Outside the Airport Center
The Airport Center is located at 551 N 2200 W in Salt Lake City (Tyler Alexander)
Todd Baird in the hangar with aviation students
Todd Baird is the Department Coordinator and an Aviation Maintenance Instructor at Salt Lake Community College. (Tyler Alexander)
Todd Baird at the controls
Todd Baird, Department Coordinator at work (Tyler Alexander)
Turbines ready to be worked on
Large turbines are available for students to work on at SLCC’s Airport Center (Tyler Alexander)
Students work in the hangar
A giant hangar is the work space for these students. (Tyler Alexander)
Two students working in the steel shop
SLCC aviation students fabricate and make repairs in the steel shop at the Airport Center in Salt Lake City. (Tyler Alexander)
One student at a workbench
Plenty of work space available for aviation students (Tyler Alexander)
Three aviation students at work
Aviation students work in steel shops (Tyler Alexander)
SLCC Aviation student making repairs
Students get to work on actual airplanes and their engines (Tyler Alexander)
Aviation student works on an airplane
Students in the aviation department get hands on experience with planes in a hangar (Tyler Alexander)
Aviation student works on engine
SLCC aviation students get to work on airplane engines and turbines at the Airport Center in Salt Lake City. (Tyler Alexander)
  • TAGS
  • Airport Center
  • Aviation
  • CTE
Brandon Crowley

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Aviation professor moving a display board of engine parts

Students can fly high with SLCC Aviation Maintenance Program

Uprooted mature tree laws across sidewalk

High winds wreak havoc in Utah

SkillsUSA, SLCC offer financial aid incentives

Mindy Relyea and Justin Howard

SLCC wants more women involved in aviation

New Westpointe Center in the works

The Globe
ABOUT US
About The Globe
Staff
Jobs
Issue PDFs
FOLLOW US
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • About The Globe
  • Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
© 2025 The Globe