The rotor lifts it straight up, that is the whole point of having a rotor
Pushing Air downwards to fly. Rapidly spinning long, thin blades push air downwards to lift the helicopter up
It can take off and land straight up and down, and it can hover in one place.
The tail propeller keeps the helicopter straight.
No. Helicopters need air to fly. There is no air on the surface of the moon. Therefore helicopters could not fly on the moon.
wait for mr.mew to come then he'll give some instructions and youll take off in his air ship (helicopter)
A VTOL (Vertical Take Off and Landing) aircraft is one that can takeoff and land like a helicopter, but fly like a plane. A good example is the V-22 Osprey.
A helicopter can only fly in an atmosphere, where there is something for the rotors to push against. There's no atmosphere on the moon, so a helicopter can't fly there.
time for an helicopter to takeoff varies on types and model of the helicopter it self. this is because every helicopter or aircraft have their own check list provided by the manufacturer or operator depending on operation. this check list is for the pilot to go through during start up, taxing, take off, approaching and landings. again, time for each machine to take off varies.
A helicopter can only fly in an atmosphere, where there is something for the rotors to push against. There's no atmosphere on the moon, so a helicopter can't fly there.
i am not completely sure.i think its yes.
Forced air vents set flush in the floor? They generally just lift straight out.
So aircraft could land and take off in confined spaces and off small ships.