Gastops
Adam Shea is a skilled engineer with extensive experience in product and process development, having served as a Product/Process Development Engineer at Gastops since November 2016. Prior roles include Quantity Coordinator for the Nalcor Energy-Lower Churchill Project, Field Engineer, and Engineering Specialist at Kiewit, where responsibilities encompassed project planning, quality assurance, and progress tracking for mechanical, electrical, and instrumentation disciplines. Adam's background also includes mechanical design work at Hyflodraulic Limited and stress analysis internships at Diamond Aircraft. A graduate of Western University with a Bachelor of Engineering Science in Mechanical Engineering and Applied Math, Adam has developed a strong foundation in engineering principles and practices throughout a diverse career.
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Gastops
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Gastops designs, manufactures and supports advanced equipment health sensing and analysis products, including on-line oil debris sensors, torque measurement sensors, turbine blade health sensors, and at-line wear debris analyzers. Additionally, we offer a wide range of specialized technical and engineering services to assist in the development of equipment control and monitoring systems, and maintenance of mission-critical assets. We have applied our equipment condition analysis engineering capabilities to develop and execute fleet maintenance programs which transform maintenance from the traditional scheduled or reactive maintenance, to a more proactive condition based approach. This approach has also exposed us to the industry need to provide high performance, responsive, maintenance, repair and overhaul services for high value aviation components. For 40 years, our solutions have been used in Defense, Aerospace, Energy and Marine applications to optimize the availability, productivity, maintenance, performance and safety of mission-critical assets. We offer peace of mind to our customers by supporting the equipment that helps their aircraft fly, ships sail, trains roll, generators generate, and turbines turn.