yes its caused by the air flowing to slow over the wing or if the angle of attack is to high and this causes turbulence
The jet engines used jet fuel, not gasoline as the 6 main engines did.
The 2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull produced a large ash cloud, which is dangerous to aircraft. It can damage aircraft windshields and engines, especially jet engines. Ash that enters a jet engine melts in the intense heat and resolidifies within the engine as glass, which can cause a stall.
This depends on the type of jet.
An aircraft propelled by jet engines rather than piston engines.
Many factories in Britain make jet engines.
jet engines require air, compression, and combustion to make it work
A jet plane is any aircraft powered by jet engines.
yes they are, they are the engines you see on a 747 or even a small Private jet
None. Jet engines don't have cylinders. While Jet engines don't have cylinders they have combustors (which can also be called combustion chambers). Due to turbulence and other problems early jet engines had multiple small combustors, most modern jet engines have only one large combustor as it is simpler to build. some jets have combustion 'cans' which are cylinders but have no moving parts within
It is the height, width and length of a jet engine.
its engines
junkyard