The Pratt & Whitney PW1000G Geared Turbofan (GTF) powers the Airbus A320neo, A220, and Embraer E-Jet E2 families. By decoupling the fan and low-pressure spool, the GTF delivers significantly reduced fuel burn, lower noise, and improved environmental performance compared with previous-generation engines.
As a next-generation engine, the PW1000G introduces advanced materials, new maintenance philosophies, and different cost drivers across the engine lifecycle, making specialist technical oversight essential, particularly once engines enter the shop.
Operator Challenges
While the PW1000G delivers strong operational and environmental benefits, managing GTF engines through maintenance events presents distinct challenges — especially for operators and lessors without dedicated powerplant teams.
Common Operator challenges include:
- Limited in-house capability to manage complex PW1000G shop visits end-to-end due to early reliability issues
- High commercial exposure from findings, over-and-above work, and contractual interpretation
- The need to make time-critical technical and cost decisions with evolving shop visit information
- Managing multiple GTF engines concurrently without losing visibility or control
- Invoice escalation after the event, when scope and charges can no longer be challenged
Without independent, experienced oversight, cost and risk can increase rapidly during PW1000G shop visits.
How TGIS Supports
TGIS supports operators and lessors managing PW1000G engines through complex and often concurrent shop visits, particularly where in-house powerplant capacity is limited.
Our specialists act as an independent extension of the operator’s team, providing real-time shop visit oversight — tracking findings as they arise, challenging non-contractual work, and holding MROs to agreed terms before costs escalate.
Our PW1000G support includes:
- Managing multiple GTF shop visits simultaneously with full technical and commercial visibility
- Tracking findings and decision impacts in real time, not months after the event
- Challenging over-and-above and non-contractual charges before they reach invoice stage
- Protecting cost exposure while maintaining technical integrity and contractual compliance
- Allowing internal teams to remain focused on wider fleet priorities with confidence
In a recent GTF programme, TGIS supported a lessor through multiple concurrent PW1000G shop visits, identifying and challenging non-contractual charges and saving $128k on a single invoice.
“We don’t have an in-house powerplant team, so when we had to manage multiple PW GTF engines in the shop, TGIS became it.”

