Military aviation support infrastructure is under growing pressure to perform across longer service cycles, harsher deployment conditions and specialized aircraft programs. Ground support equipment once designed around standardized platforms now has to accommodate evolving airframes, transport constraints and maintenance environments across defense branches and aerospace programs. Procurement teams are no longer evaluating suppliers solely on product availability or scale. Greater attention is being placed on engineering collaboration, long-term maintainability and the ability to adapt proven systems to mission-specific requirements.
That shift matters as defense organizations extend legacy aircraft lifecycles while introducing newer platforms with tighter dimensional tolerances, stricter mobility requirements and more complex servicing needs. Maintenance depots and aerospace engineering teams increasingly require suppliers capable of engaging early in the design process, before complete technical specifications are finalized. Manufacturers that contribute engineering insight during those stages can help reduce redesign cycles, procurement delays and maintenance complications.
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Customization has also become central to aerospace support procurement. Standardized equipment can create limitations when programs involve transport compatibility, unusual load distribution or environmental performance demands. Buyers value manufacturers that can modify existing platforms without compromising certification requirements or delivery timelines. Engineering depth matters because many aerospace support applications involve mechanical, hydraulic and electrical elements that must function together under controlled tolerances.
Long-term reliability remains critical, particularly for defense applications where equipment may remain in service for decades. Products supporting military aircraft frequently operate across extreme climates, variable terrain and demanding transport conditions. Procurement leaders favor manufacturers with established quality systems, traceable manufacturing controls and direct experience supporting defense maintenance ecosystems. In-house manufacturing also carries weight because it allows tighter oversight of quality consistency, lead times and product modifications.
Aerol operates through a model centered on engineering collaboration, vertically integrated manufacturing and decades of defense-sector specialization. Approximately seventy percent of its business supports Department of Defense programs, including engineering depots and maintenance organizations responsible for long-service military equipment. Its customer base also includes major aerospace and defense contractors alongside commercial aerospace and launch organizations.
Its approach is built around early engagement with engineering teams to define application requirements before final equipment specifications are established. One recent example involved collaboration with a naval engineering depot developing a maintenance dolly for the CH-53K helicopter. The project required a customized running gear system capable of meeting strict height limitations while supporting transport inside military cargo aircraft. Aerol combined its existing running gear platform with specialized wheel configurations and in-house manufactured components to satisfy both load and dimensional requirements.
Its long-standing relationship with Lockheed Martin’s U-2 aircraft program reflects another dimension of its specialization. Aerol developed a wheel system capable of handling extreme speed, temperature and load conditions uncommon in conventional polyurethane applications. The product remains in service decades after introduction, supporting aircraft operating across severe environmental ranges.
Aerol’s advantage is reinforced by its vertically integrated manufacturing structure across multiple affiliated business units in Michigan. Fabrication, machining and polyurethane processing are handled internally, giving it greater control over lead times, quality verification and custom development. Its engineering teams include mechanical, hydraulic and electrical specialists capable of integrating newer automated technologies alongside traditional aerospace support systems. For defense and aerospace organizations managing specialized fleets and demanding maintenance environments, Aerol stands out as a manufacturer equipped to support legacy reliability and evolving program requirements.

