- [citation needed]
Cierva C.1
Cierva C.2
Cierva C.3
Cierva C.4
Cierva C.5
Cierva C.6
Cierva C.7
Cierva C.8
Cierva C.9
Cierva C.10
Cierva C.12 (first flight...
- Juan de la
Cierva y Codorníu, 1st
Count of la
Cierva ([ˈxwan de la ˈθjeɾβaj koðoɾˈni.u]; 21
September 1895 – 9
December 1936), was a
Spanish civil engineer...
-
originally named the
autogiro by its
Spanish inventor and engineer, Juan de la
Cierva, in his
attempt to
create an
aircraft that
could fly
safely at low speeds...
- The
Cierva C.30 is an
autogyro designed by Juan de la
Cierva and
built under licence from the
Cierva Autogiro Company by A V Roe & Co Ltd (Avro), Lioré-et-Olivier...
- De la
Cierva (Spanish, 'of the deer') is a surname.
Notable people with the
surname include: Juan de la
Cierva (1895–1936),
Spanish civil engineer, pilot...
- The
Cierva W.9 was a
British 1940s
experimental helicopter with a three-blade tilting-hub
controlled main rotor, and
torque compensation achieved using...
- The
Cierva W.11 Air
Horse was a
helicopter developed by the
Cierva Autogiro Company in the
United Kingdom during the mid-1940s. The
largest helicopter...
- The Juan de la
Cierva Scholarship (JdlC) is a
Spanish post-doctoral scholarship,
funded by the
Spanish Ministry of Science, that
allows outstanding young...
-
kilometres (3.2 mi) into
Gerlache Strait south of
Cierva Cove and
north of
Duarte Cove. It ends in
Cierva Point and
Sucia Point to the west. The feature...
- The
Cierva W.5 was a
helicopter developed by the
Cierva Autogiro Company in the
United Kingdom. It was a
single seater twin
rotor helicopter- the rotors...