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Some interesting facts from my tour of KLM’s engine overhaul workshop

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On Monday I got a tour of KLM Engine Services at Amsterdam Schiphol.

Most of you will know that the most expensive part of a new aircraft is the engines.  What you might not know is the huge cost involved in maintaining them.

KLM, like most major airlines, runs its own engine maintenance operation.  As well as looking after various KLM and Air France fleets, it also takes in work from other airlines.

Note: these photos are all fairly similar because I was not allowed to show any employees or any details which would identify the owner of any particular engine.

Click on any picture to enlarge slightly:

KLM Engine Services tour

The financials are staggering.  For a long-haul aircraft, the engine requires a full overhaul every 25,000 – 30,000 hours of flying time.  This means every 5-8 years in practice.

The full overhaul will take three months to complete.  The cost will be 50% of the cost of buying a new engine, so up to $15m.  Even a standard short-haul engine will cost $3m+.

KLM Engine Services tour

Because a plane which does not fly is a plane which does not make any money, replacement engines are fitted whilst the originals are being fixed.

This can cost up to $250,000 per month in lease costs – assuming that KLM does not have a spare in stock – so there is real pressure to get the overhaul done as quickly as possible.

KLM Engine Services tour

The workshop at Schiphol can comfortably handle 50 engine overhauls at once, and runs at 200-250 completed jobs per year.  Land has already been acquired for an extension which would take capacity up to 300 engines per year.

Competition is apparently tough, however.  There are 45 similar sites across the globe, many in lower cost countries than the Netherlands.  In an attempt to create stability, GE will now only allow licensed operators to overhaul its new generation of engines and is restricting license issuing.

KLM Engine Services tour

Even now, sites like KLM Engine Systems will not work on all aircraft types.  Engineers are specifically trained by engine and specialist equipment is required for each engine type.  Expansion into a new engine class requires careful analysis of the potential supply and demand.

KLM Engine Services tour

In the past, airlines were happy with ‘parts pooling’ and would allow parts to be swapped between engines owned by ‘friendly’ airline partners because it often allowed one engine to return to service more quickly.

This is no longer the case, partly because research has shown that engines are more efficient if they retain more of their original parts and partly because many engines are now owned by leasing companies who have no interest in sharing components.

KLM Engine Services tour

Whether or not parts are shared, documentation is key.  Paper records are still kept of every single component in an engine.  There must be a paper trail showing that the part is original (there is a black market in cheap non-OEM parts, especially for ‘bread and butter’ components) and has been examined.

We were told that it was not unheard of for an entire engine to be stripped down again because the paperwork was missing for a single tiny component somewhere inside.

KLM Engine Services tour

The factory is not usually open to the public so you cannot visit yourself.

Hopefully this article has given you a bit of insight into a key part of the aviation business that is rarely considered.


How to earn Flying Blue miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Flying Blue miles from UK credit cards (April 2025)

Air France and KLM do not have a UK Flying Blue credit card.  However, you can earn Flying Blue miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

These cards earn Membership Rewards points:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:1 into Flying Blue miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 1 Flying Blue mile.

The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it, not just with Air France and KLM but with any airline.

Comments (42)

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  • Adey says:

    ‘Reassuringly expensive’ 🙂

    • Julian says:

      It view of the huge amounts of labour presumably involved in such work it would be interesting to know how many, if any, of these engine facilities approved by major airlines are located in what would generally be recognised as being third world countries (also in particular who does the engine overhauls for most of the African airlines and especially the internal flights only African airlines, although of course the volume of flights is much, much higher between or within third world countries located in the Far East and in particular in Indonesia, which is definitely still Third World)?

      IAG is a company not shy of outsourcing almost anything (including my friend’s longstanding UK IT job with BA of the last 30 years that he has just been made redundant from in favour of outsourcing to India) on which it can save a bean or too, and especially anything that is not directly visible to customers, to suppliers in third world countries. So again who maintains their engines? I would hope and expect that the IAG or BA and Iberia/IberiaExpress/Vueling engine facilities are still exclusive In House but I may well not be right on that.

      • None says:

        Developing World. Not “Third World”.

        • David says:

          “Developing” is sometimes a bit of a misnomer though – some third world economies are going nowhere.

        • mike says:

          incorrect. in geo-economic terms, the correct term to use has always been LDC, Less Developed Countries.

        • Charlie T. says:

          Since third world countries formally include Switzerland and Ireland amongst their number, I think it’s safe to say that its use is confusing at best!

      • Marcw says:

        It’s wrong to believe/think that your current employer will hire you until you are retired. I’m not sure, but Iberia, Iberia Express and Vueling engines are checked in IB maintenance facilities

        • Lady London says:

          Well when someone joined 30 years ago, it was.

          Fine if things have changed but employers should honour previous commitments.
          By all means change for new people coming in.

      • Jk says:

        QF did the same a few years back, making their internal engineering teams tender for work against offshore companies in Singapore, Indo, Phillipines etc. Of course the locals who had done the job brilliantly for decades were never going to win. The unions made a huge issue out of it at the time, questioning the quality of work from Asia, and the public largely supported them – but at the same time wanting cheap fares.

        Personally I think it’s very short sighted to lose such onshore engineering capabilities, especially if we ever have another war.

  • Mike says:

    Thanks Rob – really interesting

  • Peter K says:

    This article took me back to the earlier days of HfP. Very interesting and enjoyable to read ????

  • Brighton Belle says:

    As someone who always has a small washer left over after reassembling some gizmo it’s reassuring there are real engineers who care that it’s all done right. What’s a bit baffling is how EasyJet can charge me £25 to Nice, the Government extract a chunk of tax and there’s still a few pennies left over to pay for this precision and the cost of everything else on board including the fuel. Running an airline must require stainless steel underpants

    • Simon says:

      If they run anything like the Ryanair model, the local authority at the destination airport will pay Easyjet handsomely for bringing tourists and holidaymakers to the region/city.

      • Peter K says:

        They also expect to make £x per person via Buy on Board, seat reservations etc that help them be profitable.

  • Alan says:

    I see KLM just launched a US credit card – wonder how long before they start upping redemption rates due to more points in the system! Hopefully through take the BA approach and up the YQ ex-US instead 😉

  • Trevor says:

    Very interesting Rob. Good first coffee of the day read….

  • Aviator says:

    I found this rather interesting Rob, especially to see how similar it is to my own job. I work for Pratt & Whitney Canada, and couldn’t agree more on lots of the items. It’s fair to say we work with small to medium size turbofans, turbo shaft and turboprops so the costs are not as ridiculous. But anything with an aviation tag ???? will always be huge in cost.

    Really amazed to see you got access there is so much export control involved these days…

  • Charlie T. says:

    I did the Airbus factory tour in Toulouse this summer, which, while quite fun, didn’t let you get as remotely close to the action as you seem to be here. Looks like fun (in a very geeky sort of way)!

    • Andrew says:

      The Boeing Factory at Seattle is also worth a visit.

      • Alex W says:

        I’m off to Seattle on 27 Oct and looking forward to this. Any special tips or just book online for the “Future of Flight Aviation Center & Boeing Tour”? Thanks.

        • Stu N says:

          Yes, just book in online a few weeks before you go. The tour is really good – the scale of the production facilities is genuinely awesome and we were lucky enough to see one of the Dreamlifters leave for Japan to collect some wings half way through ours. The museum is only really good for half an hour to an hour while you wait for your tour though so I wouldn’t recommend arriving hours before.

        • Alex W says:

          Thank you.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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