- wing
warping to
achieve control. This was a
significant influence on
early aircraft designers. The
Wright brothers were the
first group to use
warping wings...
-
hooks,
which raise and
lower the
warp,
creating sheds. The
hooks, when vertical, have the weft
threads looped around them horizontally. If the
hooks are...
- The
heddles raise the
warp to
create the shed
through which the
shuttle carrying the weft will p****. A loom with a 400-
hook head
might have four threads...
- base such as burlap, linen, or rug
warp. The
loops are
pulled through the
backing material by
using a crochet-type
hook mounted in a
handle (usually wood)...
-
hooks. The
hooks that were
tilted would not be raised, so the
warp threads that were
snagged by
those hooks would remain in place; however, the
hooks...
- tailhook,
arresting hook, or
arrester hook is a
device attached to the
empennage (rear) of some
military fixed-wing aircraft. The
hook is used to achieve...
- are
frequently coupled with
warping drums (as
distinct from
warping heads).[clarification needed] In some of
these the
warping drums are of the self tensioning...
-
upload options being integrated on
April 23, 2005, with the
slogan "Tune In,
Hook Up" ─ the
original idea of Chad Hurley,
Steve Chen, and
Jawed Karim. The...
-
practical than wing
warping.
Ailerons also had the
advantage of not
weakening the airplane's wing
structure as did the wing
warping technique,
which was...
-
Traditional rug
hooking is a
craft in
which rugs are made by
pulling loops of yarn or
fabric through a
stiff woven base such as burlap, linen, rug
warp or monks...