i guess when the engines are set to full thrust, and when the plane leaves the ground...
George Cayley google it or use wikipedia because it is highly reliable
Lift (up)Thrust (forward)Gravity (down)Drag (backward)
By spinning its rotors to create downward thrust.
An aircraft creates thrust by sucking in air through it's turbine engines compressing it and spraying in fuel and then a spark is added to ignite the mixture
Thrust is energy inside a planes turbuline.
the jet engines create thrust and when there is enough thrust or speed, the airplane takes off because of the airfoil shape of the wings which makes low pressure on the top of the wing and high pressure on the bottom.
Jet planes fly with the help of Thrust and Lift produced by the jet engines.
It produces 'thrust'.
A thrust to weight ratio of 1:1 is good on RC planes so I'd recommend 5KG of thrust
They have skids instead of wheels.Answer:The braking action is provided by the thrust diverters on jet engines or the change in orientation of the propellors on other planes. These mods redirect the thrust so it blows forward, stopping the aircraft
Planes can in go in reverse on the ground with the use of thrust reverser's. Clam shell doors on the back of a jet engine that reverses the thrust and will actually back up the aircraft. All modern airliners have this capability.
A bluejay's wings create both lift and thrust.
Most biplanes had radial engines driving a propeller, this created thrust when it rotated.
i guess when the engines are set to full thrust, and when the plane leaves the ground...
George Cayley google it or use wikipedia because it is highly reliable
Lift (up)Thrust (forward)Gravity (down)Drag (backward)