- In
naval architecture, a
flush deck is a ship
deck that is
continuous from stem to stern.[citation needed]
Flush decks have been in use
since the times...
-
decks were
decks lower than
decks fore and aft,
usually at the main
deck level, so that
breaks appear in the main
deck profile, as
opposed to a
flush...
-
French flush-cut saw or
diagonal pliers Flush deck, in
naval architecture Flush door
Flush hem (hemming and seaming), in
metal forming Flush hole, a...
- hand when
using a
standard 52-card
deck,
except under ace-to-five low
rules where straights,
flushes and
straight flushes are not recognized. An additional...
- for
greater fuel
capacity and was the last pre-World War II
class of
flush-
deck destroyers to be
built for the
United States.
Until the Fletcher-class...
-
converted from one Caldwell-class, 17 Wickes-class, and 14 Clemson-class "
flush-
deck"
destroyers built during and
after World War I. Some of
these had been...
-
refer to the
deck of a bridge.
Flight deck: (naval) A
deck from
which aircraft take off or land.
Flush deck: Any
continuous unbroken deck from stem to...
- The
peacetime years between 1919 and 1941
resulted in many of
these flush deck destroyers being laid up. Additionally,
treaties regulated destroyer construction...
- forbidden. This
experience prompted the
development of
vessels with a
flush deck and
produced the
first large fleet ships. In 1918, HMS Argus
became the...
- 'break' (the rear end of the
forecastle with the main
deck behind and below)
relative to a
flush deck structure. Some
sailing ships and many
modern non-sail...