Shelf Life (Aviation Parts) : ce que cela signifie pour la douane aviation

Shelf life for aviation parts is the approved time limit during which a part, material, or consumable may be stored and used before expiry or required reinspection.

Faits clés

Également connu sous
Autorité émettriceOEM / approved data
Régions concernéesGlobal
Réglementation associée
Type de documentRapport / dossier

Pourquoi Shelf Life (Aviation Parts) compte en logistique aviation

Expired shelf-life parts can clear customs but still be unusable for maintenance, creating expensive AOG surprises.

Customs files, invoices, and packing lists often need lot, batch, cure date, or expiry data to support receiving inspection.

Forwarders and brokers must preserve shelf-life evidence for temperature-sensitive or time-limited aviation goods.

Comment fonctionne Shelf Life (Aviation Parts)

OEM, approved data, or material specifications define the shelf-life rules and storage conditions.

Suppliers include expiry, cure, batch, or certificate data in the shipment document set.

Receiving teams compare remaining life against operator requirements before releasing the part or material for use.

Erreurs fréquentes sur Shelf Life (Aviation Parts)

  • Shipping without expiry or batch evidence Missing shelf-life data forces manual supplier follow-up and can make urgent material unusable on arrival.
  • Ignoring storage condition requirements Temperature or packaging deviations can invalidate remaining life even when the date has not passed.
  • Letting shelf-life fields differ across documents Inconsistent lot or expiry data slows customs, receiving, and quality review.

Comment Doana traite Shelf Life (Aviation Parts)

Doana extracts lot, batch, expiry, and certificate fields from aviation shipment documents for faster receiving and broker checks.

Teams can flag short-life or missing shelf-life evidence before freight is released to the line.

Automatiser les documents Shelf Life (Aviation Parts)

  • AOG (Aircraft on Ground) AOG is an operational status indicating an aircraft cannot fly until a required part, repair, or certificate issue is re
  • MRO (Maintenance, Repair & Overhaul) MRO describes the maintenance ecosystem that keeps aircraft airworthy—workshops, line maintenance, and overhaul provider
  • Component Maintenance Manual (CMM) A Component Maintenance Manual is OEM or approved maintenance data describing how a specific aviation component is inspe