- The
fuselage (/ˈfjuːzəlɑːʒ/; from the
French fuselé "spindle-shaped") is an aircraft's main body section. It
holds crew, p****engers, or cargo. In single-engine...
- smooth. Most fixed-wing
aircraft have a
single fuselage.
Others may have
multiple fuselages, or the
fuselage may be ****ed with
booms on
either side of the...
-
Voices from the
Fuselage are an
English progressive metal band from Northampton,
currently signed to
White Star Records. The band
formed in 2010, when...
-
lofting process, with
longitudinal axis
labeled as "stations" (usually
fuselage stations,
frame stations, FS),
transverse axis as "buttocks lines" (or...
- A twin-
fuselage aircraft has two main
fuselages. It is
distinct from the twin-boom
configuration which has a
single main
fuselage with two
subsidiary boom...
-
lengthened and
widened the
fuselage to
increase the
internal weapons load;
another design, the FB-22-2, had a
stretched mid-
fuselage for
increased main bay...
-
shearing off both
wings and the tail cone. The
remaining portion of the
fuselage slid down a
glacier at an
estimated 350 km/h (220 mph),
descending 725...
- also
known as
blended body,
hybrid wing body (HWB) or a
lifting aerofoil fuselage, is a fixed-wing
aircraft having no
clear dividing line
between the wings...
- more
slender floats mounted under the
fuselage to
provide buoyancy. By contrast, a
flying boat uses its
fuselage for buoyancy.
Either type of seaplane...
-
steady flight. A
fuselage, a long, thin body,
usually with
tapered or
rounded ends to make its
shape aerodynamically smooth. The
fuselage joins the other...