Starboard: A nautical term borrowed for flying terminology indicating the right-hand side of an aeroplane when looking forward from the pilot's seat.
Starboard Right-hand side of an aeroplane when looking forward. T. 1 Licensed Radiotelephony operator T. U/T Radiotelephony operator under training ...
STARBOARD Nautical usage adopted in aviation. The right side, as determined by an observer in the vehicle, when vehicle and observer are right side up, and obse...
STARBOARD - Right-hand side when facing forward.
STOL - Short take-off and landing capability.
Aircraft to starboard is of right of way aircraft Overtake in the air to the right. Overtaking aircraft must not interfere with the overtaken aircraft ...
The aircraft, BA Concorde G-BOAD, was painted in Singapore Airlines livery on the port side and British Airways livery on the starboard side.
The radiator was set in the top wing to starboard of the centre-line; machines operating in Palestine had two radiators. Wings, interplane struts and tail were identical to those of the D.III, but the D.
Take your favorite aerobatic airplane and paint the starboard rudder pedal green and the port rudder pedal red, just so we can keep straight which is which. Now go to a safe altitude and set up for inverted slow flight.
The HL-10 attempted to solve part of this problem by angling the port and starboard vertical stabilizers outward and enlarging the center one. Air flow separation caused the crash of the Northrop M2-F2 lifting body.
See also: Aircraft, Pilot, Flight, Plane, Wing
 
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