PWI, INC.
The Word Is Out on the Best Kept Secret in Business Aviation
PWI, Inc. can be thought of as the Intel of business aviation. They're on the inside of most business aircraft, and although you may rely on their electronics and lighting solutions while in the air, you might not realize their products are hard at work in the background. Now, PWI is making a push for broader awareness of their products and company, in part by exhibiting at this year's NBAA 62nd Annual Meeting & Convention (NBAA2009).
Established in 1963, PWI is a family-owned company managed by President Robi Lorik. It manufactures a variety of lighting, small electronics, power supply, printed circuit boards and coil winding for Cessna, Hawker Beechcraft, Bombardier and many other aviation companies. They even supply all indirect lighting for the Number One Air Force jet in the fleet and work with NASA to provide electronics solutions.
"We're the best kept secret in the industry," said Don Cantwell, sales manager at PWI. This year marks the first time PWI has exhibited at a business aviation conference in over 12 years, so it is using its presence to promote a new partnership with Lonestar Aviation, from Mansfield, TX, which will assist with sales, marketing and FAA approval work.
"We chose to exhibit at NBAA2009 because it's the biggest and the most respected conference in business aviation," Cantwell explained. "This is our coming-out party and now we're going to walk away at the end of the week better known in the industry."
Learn more about PWI, Inc. in the Online Exhibitor Directory.
Any person who attends an NBAA convention, conference, seminar or other program grants permission to NBAA, its employees and agents (collectively "NBAA") to record his or her visual/audio images, including, but not limited to, photographs, digital images, voices, sound or video recordings, audio clips, or accompanying written descriptions, and, without notifying such person, to use his or her name and such images for any purpose of NBAA, including advertisements for NBAA and its programs.



