- A
wingover (also
called a wing-over-wing, crop-duster turn or box-canyon turn) is an
aerobatic maneuver in
which an
airplane makes a
steep climb, followed...
-
opposite direction. The
wingover is
similar to a
stall turn, but the
fighter does not
actually stall,
which makes the
wingover more
difficult for an enemy...
- and
descent rate. Lazy eight; 1/4
looping up,
wingover (left or right), 1/2
looping down+up,
wingover (right or left), 1/4
looping down Lomcovak; family...
- with a non-zero
turning radius at the top of the climb, is
known as a
wingover. If the
rudder turn is
executed right at the
initiation of the stall, the...
-
turns in
excess of 45°,
exceeded pitch-angle limits, and
executed a
wingover. The
wingover was not
specifically prohibited but was not recommended, because...
- inversions: a
Vertical Loop a Zero-G Roll a
second Vertical Loop a
Wingover a
second Wingover When The
Great White opened, its
queue line
wrapped around a large-scale...
-
aerobatic maneuver consisting of 1/4
looping up,
wingover (left or right), 1/2
looping down+up,
wingover (right or left), 1/4
looping down VistaVision,...
-
applying full
rudder is critical. If
instigated too soon it
results in a
wingover. If
instigated too late the
plane will fall into a
sideslip or else enter...
- tore the
sleeve target to
shreds with his
angle dives. He'd
shoot from
wingovers, zooms, and
barrel rolls, and
after a few p****es the
sleeve was ribbons...
-
below 100 ft (30 m), the
aircraft pulled up for an
improperly executed wingover,
resulting in a low-level
stall and crash,
killing all on board. On 3 June...