The ATC Professional Aerospace Certification Scheme is for auditors who use aerospace auditing standards AS/EN/JISQ 9100, 9110 and 9120 and ISO 9001.
To be certified under this scheme, you'll need to demonstrate that you have the skills to audit the proper implementation of standards AS/EN/JISQ 9100, 9110 and 9120 and ISO 9001.
All applicants are required to demonstrate knowledge and competence in the application of aerospace requirements. This means services and products that have airworthiness, regulatory, legal or aerospace-specific requirements. This will be demonstrated in the work experience section of the application. It will not be sufficient to have experience of products such as seats and cabin equipment, simple fasteners, general forgings, castings, fabrications or machined parts that, while used in aerospace applications, are subject to general engineering requirements rather than the airworthiness requirements detailed below.
Auditors should demonstrate knowledge and competence in the majority of the following aerospace industry-specific aspects of aerospace industry quality, regulatory and/or military aerospace requirements:
For all Aerospace auditor grades, the auditor must have successfully completed (at a minimum) an ATC Professional-certified QMS Auditor training course appropriate to the grade for which they wish to apply.
For all aerospace auditor grades, work experience must have been within the last five years unless the auditor has successfully completed an aerospace-specific auditor course within the last five years, such as the AS 9100 Auditor training course, in which case their work experience may still be accepted.
9100/9110/9120
Auditors who wish to have the 9100/9110/9120 aerospace auditing scopes added to their certification shall undertake recognised AQMS 9100/9110/9120 courses in order to have these certifications. Self-study is not acceptable.
Additional audit requirement
For all grades: If an auditor wishes their aerospace certification scopes to include the 9100/9110/9120 aerospace standards, the audits submitted must cover some or all of these. (Scopes assigned to the auditor will be aligned to the audits submitted.)
CPD requirements
For all grades, CPD plans should include objectives designed to keep the auditor up-to-date with aerospace-specific knowledge.
Examples of acceptable ways of keeping up-to-date might include:
Note 1
Acceptable ‘aerospace experience’ means employment in an organisation that is an aerospace prime or major supplier to a prime, designing or producing engine parts, avionics, landing gear, airframe components or auxiliary equipment, or a repair/maintenance organisation that has one or more of the following:
Employment in one of the following is also considered as satisfying the aerospace work experience requirements:
Civil, military (including armed forces personnel) or space organisations such as a national aviation authority (NAA), European space agency (ESA), NASA, or a government ministry or department of defence (MOD/DoD) where the prime responsibility was for aerospace.
Note 2
For acceptable ‘aerospace experience’ within the organisation as described in Note 1, the applicant’s role is required to have been related to the Aerospace QMS. Examples would include quality manager or engineer; production or manufacturing engineer, if involved in setting quality standards or validating compliance of products or methods of manufacture in accordance with design intent; design engineer, if working with airworthiness requirements; supplier quality engineers, if evaluating suppliers QMS or products in compliance with aerospace requirements; applicants working in a national aviation authority (NAA), space agency or government department of defence, having responsibility for monitoring the design, manufacture and procurement of aerospace products from appropriately approved aerospace prime organisations or suppliers to prime organisations, the assessment and approval of such organisations’ quality management systems and compliance with airworthiness requirements. Also, armed forces personnel who have direct experience of the repair and maintenance of military aircraft and associated aircraft systems and subsystems.
The Aerospace QMS Scheme is based on the auditing key standards:
Note a): AS9120: Quality management systems – Aerospace – Requirements for stockist distributors also exists, but is not deemed to be comprehensive enough for the ATC Professional Aerospace Sector Scheme, and so audits to this standard alone are not acceptable audit experience.
Note b): The ATC Professional Aerospace QMS Scheme must not be confused with the International Aerospace Quality Group ICOP Scheme. The ATC Professional Scheme is not sufficient for auditors conducting certification audits to the standards referenced above to gain entry on to the OASIS database.