VaultMX is a maintenance intelligence engine built on tens of thousands of real, anonymized shop records. Ask it about a squawk, a fault code, or a part, and get an answer grounded in what shops actually did, complete with the references and the labor hours behind it.
When a tough squawk comes in, most shops lean on the senior tech who has seen it before. That works right up until that person is busy, out sick, or retires. Then the knowledge walks out the door, and the next mechanic starts from a blank page.
Manuals tell you how a system is supposed to work. They rarely tell you what actually fixed this fault on this airframe last time, which part the shop ended up replacing, or how many hours the job really took. That hard-won detail sits buried in years of closed work orders where nobody can search it.
VaultMX reads a large library of anonymized shop orders, each with the reported problem, the technician notes, the resolution, and the labor hours. When you ask a question, it finds the closest real cases and turns them into a clear, cited answer.
The engine draws on tens of thousands of real maintenance records, not generic web text. Every answer reflects work that was actually performed and signed off in a shop.
Type the squawk the way it shows up on the CAS message or the discrepancy sheet, along with the aircraft type. VaultMX returns the most likely cause, what worked, the parts and references involved, and typical labor hours.
When an answer pulls from more than one airframe, each point is tagged with the aircraft it came from, so you always know the source behind the guidance.
A clean, same-type result is specific and cited. It names the likely cause, the fix that worked, the part numbers and manual references, and the hours the job typically takes.
Aviation is no place for a tool that bluffs. VaultMX is honest about how well its records match your aircraft, so you always know how much weight to put on the answer.
The cited records are from your exact aircraft type. The answer is specific and presented without a caveat, because the match is direct.
Some records match your type and some come from related airframes. VaultMX says how many of each and reminds you to verify part numbers against your own documentation.
No records were found for your exact type. The guidance draws on similar systems from other airframes, clearly flagged, so the troubleshooting logic helps without being mistaken for type-specific procedure.
This page is informational. VaultMX is being rolled out carefully to a small number of shops while the record library grows. If you would like to ask about access, see a walkthrough, or talk about your own maintenance history, reach out directly.
oren@jokeraviation.comVaultMX is a product of Joker Aviation LLC. Outputs are decision support for qualified maintenance personnel and do not replace approved data or the judgment of a certificated mechanic.