No. They are designed to be driven on tracks, just like trains.
No. They are designed to be driven on tracks, just like trains.
ponka
NO
That depends on which forklift. Many are made to be driven only on smooth warehouse floors, but many others are used on building sites and by army units. These can usually be used on rough terrain.
No it cannot.
Any reasonably level surface.
Any hood from an 82 to a 92 firebird,formula or trams am
Flutter is a condition that arises when airflow over an unbalanced control surface (usually the elevator, but it could be the rudder, or any other articulating surface) reaches a certain speed and a harmonically driven dangerous oscillation is induced in the surface, per se. If the condition isn't or can't be ameliorated immediately, the tendency is for the oscillation to increase in amplitude until there is material damage to the surface: catastrophic failure. The opposite of flutter is dynamic stability.
The girl isn't hurt when the nail is driven into the block of wood because the nail is not being driven into her body; it’s being driven into a separate, solid surface. The block of wood absorbs the impact and provides a stable backing, preventing any injury. Additionally, if she is positioned safely away from the area where the nail is being driven, this further ensures her safety.
It can be all of those. I have driven safely and responsibly, i have driven for so long that the boredom of it just about put me to sleep, and I have driven in a manner dangerous to myself and passenger's. It can be daring insofar as one does not have any control at all over outside forces that may interfere with you driving or control over your driving.
All sorts, like any city. Cars, buses, bikes, motorbikes, trains, trams etc.
Moon landing is the reaching to the surface of a moon in a spacecraft that may be human-driven or robotic. For humans the Moon is a natural satellite that is in orbit around the Earth, though any natural satellite of any planet is a moon, so to say moon landing is any act of arriving on the surface of a moon. Please see related link.