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Andrea L Karalus

from East Hampton, CT
Age ~60

Andrea Karalus Phones & Addresses

  • 74 Bay Rd, East Hampton, CT 06424 (860) 267-6062
  • Depew, NY
  • Vernon Rockville, CT
  • Hartford, CT
  • Vernon Rockvl, CT

Work

Position: Clerical/White Collar

Education

Degree: High school graduate or higher

Emails

r***s@aol.com

Resumes

Resumes

Andrea Karalus Photo 1

Design Discipline Chief

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Location:
74 Bay Rd, East Hampton, CT 06424
Industry:
Aviation & Aerospace
Work:
Pratt & Whitney since May 2005
Design Chief

Pratt & Whitney Dec 2000 - May 2005
Mechanical Design Engineer

United Technologies Research Center Jan 1995 - Dec 2000
Project Design Engineer

University of Hartford Sep 1995 - May 1997
Adjunct Professor for Statics & Strength of Materials
Education:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 1986 - 1988
MS, Mechanical Engineering
State University of New York College at Buffalo 1982 - 1986
BSME, Mechanical Engineering
Skills:
Mechanical Engineering
Engineering Management
Aerospace
Unigraphics
Program Management
Finite Element Analysis
Solid Modeling
Solidworks
Continuous Improvement
Root Cause Analysis
Ansys
Design For Manufacturing
Systems Engineering
Manufacturing Engineering
Pro Engineer
Andrea Karalus Photo 2

Andrea Karalus

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Business Records

Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
Andrea Karalus
BAY POINT CLUB INC

Publications

Us Patents

Aircraft Wing/Nacelle Combination

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US Patent:
54432308, Aug 22, 1995
Filed:
Dec 21, 1993
Appl. No.:
8/171301
Inventors:
Wesley K. Lord - South Glastonbury CT
Andrea L. Karalus - East Hampton CT
Assignee:
United Technologies Corporation - Hartford CT
International Classification:
B64D 2700
B64D 2902
US Classification:
244 54
Abstract:
An aircraft wing 18 and nacelle 24 combination includes a double cambered pylon 28 extending between the wing and the nacelle to support an aircraft engine 22. The pylon includes an airfoil 30 extending in a generally vertical direction having a leading edge 32 and a trailing edge 39. The airfoil is curved away from the aircraft in an axial rearward direction and a portion of the airfoil is curved toward the aircraft in the vertical direction from the nacelle toward the wing.
Andrea L Karalus from East Hampton, CT, age ~60 Get Report