Airframe is a hero-dominant landing page template built for aircraft parts suppliers. It puts a full-viewport interactive configurator front and center, letting buyers filter by aircraft type, ATA chapter, and part category in real time. A persistent quote drawer, ruby-red stock indicators, and condition codes keep procurement managers and MRO technicians moving fast from search to request.
by Rocket studio
Airframe is a single-page template designed for aircraft parts suppliers who need to move inventory fast. The configurator-led hero narrows results by airframe type, ATA chapter, and part category. Every part card shows condition codes, stock counts, and trace documentation up front. A persistent quote drawer and direct checkout reduce the steps between discovery and order.
This template is built for operations where a grounded aircraft is a financial emergency and every hour of delay costs money. It speaks directly to the people sourcing parts under pressure.
Most parts supplier pages make buyers work too hard. They bury condition codes, hide lead times, and force a phone call before anything useful happens. That friction is expensive when an AOG clock is running.
You get a fully structured landing page that puts the parts search experience at the center of every interaction. The layout flows from the widest filter choices at the top down to the most specific part details at the bottom.




Theme
Dynamic Motion
Creative direction
Spatial & Architectural
Color system
Ruby & Chrome
Style
Hero-Dominant (90/10)
Direction
Direct Sales
Page Sections
Full-viewport Configurator Hero
Persistent Multi-line Quote Drawer
Condition Code and Stock Status Cards
Ruby-red Urgency Color System
Spatial Scroll Architecture
Dual Call to Action Purchase Path
Who is the primary buyer for this template?
What condition codes does the template display on part cards?
How does the AOG escalation path work in this template?
Can buyers request multiple parts in a single submission?
What makes the configurator hero different from a standard search bar?
This template is built around the specific workflows of aircraft parts procurement. Each feature maps directly to a moment in the buyer's journey.
The hero occupies ninety percent of the viewport. Visitors select aircraft type (narrowbody, widebody, regional, or turboprop), then ATA chapter, then part category. Results narrow in real time against a faint wireframe silhouette of the selected airframe that rotates subtly on a horizontal axis. Chrome-rendered part numbers populate like a flight manifest loading.
A side drawer stays accessible throughout the entire page. Buyers add parts to a multi-line RFQ without leaving their current position. The drawer collects company name, AOG status, tail number, and required-by date, and toggling AOG status reveals the 24/7 priority desk contact.
Every part card displays condition codes using standard aviation notation: NE (New), SV (Serviceable), OH (Overhauled), and AR (As Removed). Real-time stock counts and trace documentation details appear before the buyer clicks anything, so qualification happens on the card itself.
Ruby red is reserved exclusively for calls to action (Calls to Action), stock-status alerts, and AOG callouts. This color restraint means a red element on screen always signals something actionable, keeping urgent items impossible to overlook.
The page is structured to feel like descending through an aircraft's anatomy. Flight controls and airframe sections appear first. Hydraulics and pneumatics follow in the midsection. Avionics and cabin systems anchor the base. Shadows deepen and grid lines converge as the visitor scrolls, reinforcing a sense of physical depth.
In-stock items with listed pricing surface a "Buy Serviceable Now" button in ruby for immediate checkout. All other items use "Add to Quote" to build the RFQ. Both paths are always visible on the card, so buyers never have to decide which process to start.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Configurator Hero | Filter parts by aircraft type, ATA chapter, and category in real time |
| Single-Line Nav | Logo, search, Quote button, and AOG Hotline in one persistent bar |
| Airframe and Flight Controls | First scroll section covering structural and control surface parts |
| Hydraulics and Pneumatics | Mid-page section for fluid power and pressurization components |
| Avionics and Cabin Systems | Lower section covering electronics and interior parts |
| Part Detail Cards | Chrome-bordered cards with photos, condition codes, and stock counts |
| Persistent Quote Drawer | Side panel for building and submitting multi-line RFQs |
The color system is called Ruby and Chrome. It draws from the visual language of a fully equipped parts facility: cold alloy surfaces, mirror-finish rivets, and a single red tag that demands immediate attention.
The template is designed so that the same urgency felt on a desktop screen carries through to a mobile device. MRO technicians and procurement managers are often sourcing parts from a hangar floor or a hotel room.
The page is built around reducing friction at every decision point. Buyers arrive with a specific need and a short window to act. The layout meets them exactly there.
Airframe is categorized under Automotive and Transport, with a specific focus on the Aviation and Flight subcategory and the Aircraft Parts Supplier niche. The template style is Hero-Dominant at a 90/10 split, meaning the configurator header claims the vast majority of the first viewport. The creative direction is Spatial and Architectural, the theme is Dynamic Motion, and the color system is Ruby and Chrome. The landing page direction is Direct Sales, meaning every design decision prioritizes moving the visitor from search to quote or purchase as efficiently as possible.