The pilot uses the ailerons (control surfaces usually on the backs of the wings) to increase the lift on the left wing and reduce the lift on the right wing. This causes the left wing to raise and the right wing to lower.
Now, instead of the wings producing lift that pulls straight up on the plane, the lift is now pulling the plane up and to the right. This force causes the plane's flight path to start to curve to the right.
Aerodynamic forces called "adverse yaw" now cause the plane's nose to turn to the left. This is, obviously, not what you want when you're trying to turn right. The pilot uses the rudder (a vertical control surface usually on the back of the plane) to counter this adverse yaw and keep the nose of the plane pointing in the direction the plane is going.
When the turn is finished, the pilot uses the ailerons to restore the wings to level and uses the rudder to keep the plane coordinated (pointing in direction it is going) as he finished the turn.
(The rudder is not used to turn the plane. This is a common misconception. If you tried to use the rudder to turn the plane, the passengers would feel like they were sliding in their seats, the plane's side would begin to face into the wind, and ultimately, the inside wing would stop producing lift and drop suddenly.)
Clockwise turns to the right, counter-clockwise turns to the left
Actually, the image is NOT inverted. Take a look at the mirror: top is top, bottom is bottom, left is left, and right is right! The reason you see it inverted is more psychological; when you turn around towards the mirror, you turn around your horizontal axis - YOU invert right and left. The same happens when anybody turns towards you. If you look at somebody from behind, that perso's left part is at your left, and its right part is at your right. If the person turns around, towards you, it is THE PERSON that inverts left and right! Note that there is ONE thing that the mirror does invert, and that is back and front.
This is because a right handed turn causes his girlfriend to move towards him (the driver) due to centrifugal acceleration. Left handed turns will push her closer to her door, or away from her boyfriend. Depending on the distance that separates the boy and his girlfriend depends on his enjoyment factor. Therefore, since right handed turns make his girlfriend closer to him, he enjoys them more.
If you do it right, yes.
They don't really move to the right. Their mass keeps going straight ...that's what masses do until they're acted on by an external force.
the control column is what the pilot does to move it left, right up and down, but the airplane itself moves either the ailerons on both wings or the rudder on the vertical stabilizer (the thing that sticks up at the back of the plane) when a pilot turns left with the ailerons, the right wing ailerons move down, improving airflow and lift, lifting the wing up, while the left wing ailerons move up, spoiling airflow and lift, therefore, as the right side goes higher, and the left side goes lower, the airplane turns left. for the rudder, it simply swings left or right, creating drag on either side.
Applying left rudder turns the vertical stabilizer (tab) to the left, pushing the tail to the right and thereby the nose to the left (left turn). The primary role of the rudder is to reduce adverse yaw and thereby improve performance in banking turns and climbs.
Just the directions from the restroom doors, 8 turns right left / left right / right right / left left, or the shorter way with 6 turns, right left / right left / right left.
the code is R1-R2-O-O-O-L1-L2-R2-LEFT-RIGHT-LEFT-RIGHT.
Down for left turns, up for right turns.
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Ailerons allow the airplane to make barrels rolls. If the left aileron is down, and the right aileron is up, then the plane will do a barrel roll towards the left. If the left aileron is down, and the right aileron is down then the plane will do a barrel roll towards the right.
It is an ominous poem that gives the directions to the old house in the woods at New Jersey. Once you have the lantern from the Himalayas, and the matches from the Loch Ness pub, you can go to the dead end circle on the motorcycle, by making the indicated turns on the road. Use the matches, then press the "look around" button and go up the path to the house. The turns are right, left, left, right / right, right, left, left. The shortcut, coincidentally, is just 6 turns: right left/right, left/right, left.
if the right side chain moves faster than the left it will turn to the left, and same with Left side turning faster for right turns.
Yes, that would be your signal lights, the left set for left turns and the right set for right turns.
Oil plug turns left to loosen, and right to tighten it.
You always board an airplane on the left because the right side, whether having one engine or turbofan or two, is running to supply the aircraft with power.