
PMA vs OEM in aircraft safety equipment
Aircraft safety equipment such as fire-extinguisher cartridges, squibs, and related components may be supplied either as Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) parts or under FAA Parts Manufacturer Approval (PMA). Both approval bases are fully recognised within aviation regulatory frameworks. In practice, however, they differ significantly in how parts are designed, approved, supplied, and supported throughout their operational life.
At NEDAVION, FAA-PMA safety equipment is deliberately preferred where technically acceptable. This position is not driven by branding or price alone, but by repeated operational experience with performance, availability, lead time reliability, and lifecycle cost. In real aviation operations, these factors often outweigh theoretical distinctions between OEM and PMA.
FAA-PMA approval is issued by the Federal Aviation Administration to authorise the manufacture of replacement aircraft parts. Approval may be granted based on demonstrated identicality to the OEM design, licensed use of OEM data, or independently approved design and test data. Regardless of the approval pathway, a PMA part is an approved aircraft component with its own regulatory basis, traceability, and certification. PMA parts are installed worldwide under FAA, EASA, and bilateral acceptance frameworks, subject to operator and authority requirements.
In practice, PMA parts are not experimental or secondary-grade components. They are certified replacement parts that must meet defined airworthiness and performance standards. At NEDAVION, PMA approval basis and eligibility are reviewed before parts are offered or supplied, ensuring that interchangeability and applicability are confirmed rather than assumed.










