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Aviation Search and rescueSectional chart

Sectional aeronautical charts
Sectional aeronautical charts. Designed for visual navigation of slow- or medium-speed aircraft.

 


Sectional Charts are meant to only show a section of a flight region. These charts emphasize only landmarks and features that would be important to a pilot for navigation during flight.

Aircraft disinsection is a process of using insecticide on inbound international aircraft for insect and disease control. It was first used in the 1930s but it is being reduced because of the ill effects on passengers and crew.

Sectional - (U.S.) VFR navigation chart, equivalent to our 1:500,000 or 'half-million' ...

Sectional Chart
One of the brightly colored maps of the country used for flying VFR. They have a pretty impressive amount of data from topography to airspace boundaries and points of interest. Don't leave home without them.
SIGMET ...

Sectional Aeronautical Charts
(1:500,000) Designed for visual navigation of slow or medium speed aircraft. Topographic information on these charts features the portrayal of relief and a judicious selection of visual checkpoints for VFR flight.

Section: A technical term for the transverse projections of the drawings of flying-boats or floats from which moulds and frames are made. Also used generally to describe a cross-section of an engineering detail, such as an aerofoil.

SECTIONAL CHARTS
54 charts cover the United States
Charts are updated and reissued every 6 months
They are designed to support VFR aircraft operating at low, mid, and high altitudes
The charts are used for local area VFR en route navigation ...

Rib Section
The cross-section shape of a wing, from leading to trailing edge.
Roll ...

Sectional charts, or maps, are used primarily for flight in good weather under visual flight rules (VFR), in which the pilot can navigate using references on the ground.

SECTIONAL CHART - Any chart that ends 25 nm short of your destination.
STALL - Technique used to explain to the bank why your car payment is late.
STEEP BANKS - Banks that charge pilots more than 4% interest.

SECTIONAL AERONAUTICAL CHARTS-
(See AERONAUTICAL CHART.)
SECTOR LIST DROP INTERVAL- A parameter number of minutes after the meter fix time when arrival aircraft will be deleted from the arrival sector list.

Section II
Terms
Acceptance flight
A flight made to accept a contractor-produced aircraft, ...

Section 16.6 discusses some good coordination exercises.
1 In common usage, the phrase is a metaphor for any situation where the practitioner has such a good feel for the situation that quantitative information is superfluous — ...

Bag section molds
Sequence 2.)
Take the dimension (length ) from the lower skirt attachment line and top skirt attachment line of your craft.
Mark and cut the fabric as well as mark the final glue joints.

Large sections of the factory are used to assemble little parts into bigger subassemblies that really can't be identified as part of a helicopter. However, once we reach this part of the factory, you can see the fuselage being formed.

CENTER-SECTION - The central panel, or section, of an aircraft's wing.

CHORD - The distance measured from the leading-to trailing-edge of an airfoil.

Airfoil sections are of two basic types, symmetrical and nonsymmetrical. Symmetrical airfoils have identical upper and lower surfaces. They are suited to rotary-wing applications because they have almost no center of pressure travel.

The tail section creates a downward force to stabilize the aircraft during flight. If the tail stalls that will introduce a nose dive and the pilot must pull back on the stick or yoke. Which is completely opposite from a wing stall recovery.

Firewall: Section of the aircraft specially designed to let heat and smoke enter the cockpit.
Glide Distance: Half the distance from an airplane to the nearest emergency landing field.

Stick the section of metallic tape on the underside of the helicopter's nose. This will shift the aircraft's center-of-gravity slightly forward, resulting in more forward momentum and improved maneuverability.
3 ...

The cross section of a wing is taller on top and relatively flat on bottom. When air passes over a wing, it speeds up so that it stays in line with the air below the wing.

CLUTCH
The section of the drive train used to engage the gear when throttle is increased, and disengage while engine is at idle. This ensures that the rotor ...
CMIC
Civil Military Interface standing Committee ...

Part 91 - A section of the FAA Federal Air Regulations that refers principally to general aviation. Part 91 operations are generally non-commercial. Corporate aviation operations, for instance, usually fall under Part 91.

Buy & Sell Section
Customer Accounts
Customer Support
Product Reviews ...

SEGMENT: A section or "leg" of a continuous itinerary.
SERVICE CENTER: Place where members of frequent travel programs can call for award travel, redemption, accrual and current promotions.

Part 135 -- the section of the FAR's that govern any charter flight.

The " economy " section of an aircraft, which may have literally scores of different fares for the same flight
Commission Cap ...

The cabin is the section of the fuselage behind (and below in the case of the double-deck Boeing 747) the cockpit, where an airline carries passengers, freight, or both, in the case of a combination carrier.

There is a special section of the Beginner's Guide which deals with compressible, or high speed, aerodynamics.

Individual fighter/section is leaving the formation to pursue separate attacks.
STRIPPED
Informative call from wingman/element indicating out of briefed formation/position.

Alignment of the Center Section.-When assembling a machine, the center section should be aligned before the wings are put on.
When a machine is already assembled, the first thing to do is to loosen all wires except the landing wires.

On page 116 of that guide, the following guidelines appear under the eligibility section.

If your airspeed is 80-90 knots, go to the "En Route Save" section of this text below. If not, follow the rules under Controlling Airspeed above to adjust elevator and power until you are straight and level at an airspeed of 80-90 KIAS.

This comes from aeronautics in the study of the idealized theory of wing sections (airfoils). When dealing with an airfoil, the picture is actually that of a wing with infinite span.

The regulation implements Sections 9110 and 9111 of the Airport Noise and Capacity Act of 1990 (see also), which requires the Department of Transportation to issue regulations under which a public agency may be authorized to impose a PFC of $1, $2, ...

WASHOUT - The terms 'wing twist' and 'washout' refer to wings designed so that the outboard sections have a lower ANGLE OF INCIDENCE, 3 or 4° or so, and thus lower AOA than the inboard sections in all flight conditions.

RAM - Radar Absorbing Material - a special paint, carbon fibre, plastic, or iron ferrite coating that is applied to parts of an aircraft to reduce its radar cross-section ...

If a rotor blade was cut in half from the front of the blade (leading edge) to the rear of the blade (trailing edge), the resulting shape when looking at the cross-section is considered to be the blade "profile".

Since the wing is symmetrical (a teardrop shape in cross-section), the reduced pressure is the same both above and below.

The completed sections of the aircraft were taken to the Brooklands racing circuit where Hawkers had an assembly shed, and re-assembled on 23 October 1935.

While most aircraft are assembled and then painted, leaving unpainted sections of aluminum where panels overlap, Huskies are fitted together, then each panel is removed and individually painted so the entire panel is sealed with paint.

This can vary widely from AVOD, video games and personal screens to a single large video screen at the front of a cabin section, as well as smaller monitors situated every few rows above the aisles.

is divided into sections that list systems description and operation, checklists and normal procedures, emergency procedures, crew duties, operating limits, adverse weather procedures, etc. Your checklist is derived from this T.O.

camber - (1) The curvature of an airfoil section relative to its chord; ...

The main wings of the STOL designs taper at the wing root to allow undisturbed air to flow from the propeller to the empennage (tail sections).

In our 'basic' simulator we have a section of airspace much like this: ...

ALSO SEE THE FOLLOWING SECTIONS:
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V
vertical stabilizer
The vertical section of the tail, which helps keep the airplane aligned with its direction of motion
VSI (Vertical Speed Indicator)
An onboard instrument which gauges rate of climb or descent, in feet per minute ...

The section is broad in scope and provides general guidance in the areas of general flight rules, visual flight rules (VFR), instrument flight rules (IFR), aircraft maintenance, and preventive maintenance and alterations.

The stick fixed maneuver point is the obtained as the intersection of the (d δe / dn) vs Xcg with the Xcg axis.

AILERONS An aircraft control surface hinged to the rear, outer section of the wing for banking ('tilting') the aircraft. A bank causes an aircraft to turn. Controlled by right or left movement of the control yoke or stick.

Click on the first letter of the word from the list above to go to the appropriate section of the glossary. Contact us if you would like a personal injury law glossary or one of other legal glossaries for your website.
Legal Glossaries ...

ANHEDRAL - The downward angle of a wing in relation to a horizontal cross-section line; aka CATHEDRAL. SEE DIHEDRAL.
APPROACH CONTROL SEE RADIO NAVIGATION
APRON - The hard-surfaced or paved area around a hangar.

Fix The point of intersection of two position lines drawn on a map to determine the location of an aeroplane ...

Environmental Assessment (EA): A statement prepared under the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), Section 102(2) (c).

An aircraft’s main body structure housing the flight crew, passengers and/or cargo cabin to which the wings, tail section and engines are attached.
General Abbreviations
ACMI ...

Base leg - A flight path at right angles to the approach of a runway end. It usually extends from the downwind leg to the intersection of the extended runway centerline. See "traffic pattern." ...

A column of air, 1 square inch in cross section, measured from sea level to the top of the atmosphere would weigh approximately 14.7 lb/in2. The standard value for atmospheric pressure at sea level is: 29.92 inches or 760 mm of mercury 1013.

Because it is true it will probably be denounced as a libel on the working classes and their employers, and upon the religious-professing section of the community.

See also: Aircraft, Flight, Aviation, Pilot, Speed