CLA-2 CO:R:C:M 088941 AJS

District Director
U.S. Customs Service
P.O. Box 17423
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041

RE: Protest number 5401-90-100068; Rotortuner system; Data management unit; Operator Console; Line scan camera; Subheading 9031.80.00; Chapter 90, Additional U.S. Note 3; subsidiary; Webster's II New Riverside University Dictionary.

Dear District Director:

Protest for further review number 5401-90-100068 dated 10/31/90, was filed against the tariff classification of the Rotortuner System within subheading 9031.40.00, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS).

FACTS:

The merchandise under protest is the Rotortuner System (RS). It essentially consists of the Data Management Unit (DMU), Operator Console (OC), Line Scan Camera (LSC), accelerometers and related accessories.

The RS is a portable, fully integrated, computerized vibration management system used to reduce or manage vibration in rotating machinery (such as helicopters) and its rotating components (such as rotors, shafts, engines, gear boxes, cooling fans, etc.). It senses, measures and analyzes vibration problems.

The RS operates in the following manner. The DMU contains all signal conditioning and processing, the computing system, hard copy printer, and cassette. It accepts signal input from the OC, remote control unit, accelerometers, optical and

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magnetic pick-ups, the LSC, and the strobe. The OC is built as a unit into the DMU. It contains the control keys and a flat panel screen for data display.

The LSC is a hand-held, fixed focus, infrared transducer for automatically tracking the tip path of helicopter rotor blades, and rotating assemblies on other machines.

In the helicopter application, the LSC is pointed by the operator at the main rotor tip path plane. LEDs on the back of the camera indicate correct sighting of the blades. The LSC is controlled by firmware within the DMU and will automatically identify the blades correctly, calculate their relative heights about a mean, and measure each blade. The high accuracy of the timing data enables damper problems to be identified. The blade track pattern is derived statistically from a number of measurements and eliminates the need for subjective judgement by the operator.

ISSUE:

Whether the RS is properly classifiable within subheading 9031.40.00, HTSUS, which provides for "[m]easuring or checking instruments, appliances and machines, not specified or included elsewhere . . . [o]ther optical instruments and appliances."; or classifiable within subheading 9031.80.00, HTSUS, which provides for "other instruments, appliances and machines" of heading 9031, HTSUS.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

Heading 9031, HTSUS, provides for "[m]easuring or checking instruments, appliances and machines, not specified or included elsewhere in this chapter . . ." The RS satisfies the terms of this heading. It is used to measure and check vibrations. Accordingly, the RS is properly classifiable within heading 9031, HTSUS.

Subheading 9031.40.10, HTSUS, provides for other optical instruments and appliances. For the purposes of chapter 90, the terms "optical appliances" and "optical instruments" refer only to those appliances and instruments which incorporate one or more optical elements, but do not include any appliances or instruments in which the incorporated optical element or elements are solely for viewing a scale or for some other subsidiary purpose. Chapter 90, Additional U.S. Note 3. The RS satisfies this description of "optical". In its condition as imported, the RS is a system which incorporates an optical device (i.e., LSC).

The term "subsidiary" is described as "[s]erving to supplement or assist . . . [s]econdary in importance: subordinate." Webster's II New Riverside University Dictionary, -3-

p. 1155 (1984). The LSC is not used for a subsidiary purpose. When the LSC is used, it certainly is not used in a supplemental manner nor is it secondary in importance. It performs a function that is not performed by any other components of the RS. The submitted literature states that the LSC is used "primarily for automatic tracking of the tip path of helicopter rotor blades and is also applicable to other positional measurement systems." Furthermore, the literature states that the LSC is one of the devices from which the DMU accepts signal input. Accordingly, the RS satisfies the terms of subheading 9031.40.00, HTSUS, and is properly classifiable therein.

The protestant appears to be of the view that the LSC serves a subsidiary purpose because it is not used all of the time that the RS is used. But this is not our understanding regarding the meaning of "subsidiary" as set forth in Note 2. The meaning of "subsidiary" has nothing to do with the amount of time optics are used in the overall use of a device, but it relates more to the type of task which the optics perform when being used in the operation of the device. As discussed previously, the task performed by the LSC is clearly not subsidiary when the main rotor is being balanced.

The protestant claims that the RS is classifiable within subheading 9031.80.00, HTSUS, which provides for "other instruments, appliances or machines". This claim is premised on the argument that the RS is not an optical instrument. As discussed previously, the RS is an optical instrument. Therefore, classification within this subheading is precluded.

HOLDING:

The RS is properly classifiable within subheading 9031.40.00, HTSUS, which provides for other optical measuring or checking instruments and appliances, dutiable at the General Column 1 rate of 10 percent ad valorem. You should deny the protest in full. A copy of this decision should be attached to the Customs Form 19, Notice of Action, and provided to the protestant.


Sincerely,


John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division