They are hydraulic. Most controls surfaces are hydraulic.
Hydraulics extends or retracts a hydraulic cylinder that pushes a lever on the flap, moving it.
Usually, all the way down.
each plane has a set take off speed , flap position and weight for take off
Yes, a urethral sphincter controls the release of urine. This is a "flap" that is found between the kidneys and urethra that opens and closes to keep urine in, or let it down to be urinated out.
the main parts of an airplane is 1.the propeller without it it can't fly 2.rudder 3 right wing flap 4 left wing flap 5wing 6 landing gear 7landing wheels 8tail of the plane
A flap on a plane moves by extending downward or backward from the wing surface. This increases the wing's surface area and changes its shape, which helps to generate more lift at lower speeds, allowing the plane to take off and land more slowly and safely. The pilot controls the flaps using the cockpit controls.
you have to turn one flap up and the other one down to get your paper airplane to do a barell roll
Depends on the lining up on the ils uc available, weight, head wind, flap configuration, temperature at ground level
The door that controls the air conditioning flow can be found near the fan blower motor. The fan blower motor is behind the dashboard on the passenger side of the car.
All airplanes have different controls, but they fall into four functional groups.The first are "aerodynamic" controls. Those set the aircraft's altitude, the amount of lift the wing generates, and the direction the plane is moving. These include the control yoke, the pedals, flap and spoiler controls (if your plane is large enough to have spoilers), landing gear retract controls if your plane needs them...The second are "power" controls. These operate the engines and propellers.Third are "navigational" controls - used to tell you where you are and help you fly the plane toward your destination. Let's put the plane's external lighting system into this category.And fourth are "comfort" controls. They set the temperature of the cabin, control the in-flight entertainment system, and other "nice-to-have" things that aren't absolutely necessary.Some aircraft have "mission-specific" controls - a police helicopter has a searchlight, a Black Hawk helicopter has a hoist, a fighter jet has missile and gun controls...
Harder to answer than you would think.If you had asked "AIRPLANE" the answer would be NOBut there have been submarines called Planes built.The little flap things on submarines are called Planes.So a Plane will work, But an Airplane designed for Air Use will not.
flap flap flap.