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Q: How much is a bluetooth paper airplane going to be sold for?
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Related questions

Which flies paper airplane or foil airplane?

Paper, because it is much lighter, and a foil airplane will take up much more mass.


How much do the wings of an airplane weigh?

Airplane? What airplane? My paper airplane wings weigh less than 8 grams.


How much more does an airplane weigh compared to a beluga whale?

A paper airplane? A 747? Cessna?


What is the best paper airplane?

Generally, this is a matter of individual preference. It is unlikely that one paper airplane design is the best at everything (range, speed, glide ratio, etc.). Many airplanes are claimed to be the best, but these claims are unsubstantiated.


How does the design of a paper airplane affects it's flight?

The weight of the paper. If you accumulate a lot of paper at one place (depending on the design) it could bring the airplane down faster than if you didn't accumulate so much paper in one place.


Why is going on an airplane so much money?

Fueling a jet is so much money.


How fast does a paper airplane fly?

its the eagle heres how yau do it........ go on google and type ''what is the fastest paper airplane'' then click on the first thing you see and follow the steps and this is what you get image not found


Does an airplane made out of line paper fly farther than an airplane made out of printer paper?

This question is debatable. Lined paper is lighter, but that doesn't mean it flies better. I think that it's all about how you fold it and which design you choose. If one WA yto do an experiment, I would predict that lined paper would fly a little father, but not by much.


Why a heavier paper airplane fly further than a lighter paper airplane?

The answer to this question is a matter of some fairly simple physics which I will try to explain to you. First, you need to understand that most paper airplanes are not really airplanes. Airplanes fly because the shape of the wing produces lift; paper airplanes mostly fly as projectiles, meaning that they fly because you throw them. The first reason that the lighter airplane might not fly as far is in the design. Typically, the lighter paper airplane will have larger wings, and therefore, more drag. Since it is virtually impossible to make the paper airplane perfectly symmetrical, one of the wings has more drag which causes the airplane to spin and crash short of its maximum possible distance. The second reason is also related to the design. If you have a light airplane with more drag and a heavy airplane with less drag, the heavy airplane can fly much more easily. This is because the heavier airplane has less drag as well as more momentum to "push" through the air. On this note, a piece of paper crumpled into a ball will fly further than most paper airplanes I have seen just because is has lots of mass for the level of drag it induces. The crumpled piece of paper also will probably fly much straighter that the paper airplane too, just because it is fairly uniform in shape. At this point, we are completely ignoring lift; but at such a small scale with such light material, it works better that way due to the reasons above. Of course, if you put engines and control surfaces on the paper structure, you change the game entirely. Now it has to fly with lift instead of as a projectile otherwise it will crash because it has no control. This explains why real airplanes are not just big balls of metal.


Why does a heavier paper airplane fly further than a lighter paper airplane?

The answer to this question is a matter of some fairly simple physics which I will try to explain to you. First, you need to understand that most paper airplanes are not really airplanes. Airplanes fly because the shape of the wing produces lift; paper airplanes mostly fly as projectiles, meaning that they fly because you throw them. The first reason that the lighter airplane might not fly as far is in the design. Typically, the lighter paper airplane will have larger wings, and therefore, more drag. Since it is virtually impossible to make the paper airplane perfectly symmetrical, one of the wings has more drag which causes the airplane to spin and crash short of its maximum possible distance. The second reason is also related to the design. If you have a light airplane with more drag and a heavy airplane with less drag, the heavy airplane can fly much more easily. This is because the heavier airplane has less drag as well as more momentum to "push" through the air. On this note, a piece of paper crumpled into a ball will fly further than most paper airplanes I have seen just because is has lots of mass for the level of drag it induces. The crumpled piece of paper also will probably fly much straighter that the paper airplane too, just because it is fairly uniform in shape. At this point, we are completely ignoring lift; but at such a small scale with such light material, it works better that way due to the reasons above. Of course, if you put engines and control surfaces on the paper structure, you change the game entirely. Now it has to fly with lift instead of as a projectile otherwise it will crash because it has no control. This explains why real airplanes are not just big balls of metal.


How much does it cost to use bluetooth?

no it does not cost to use Bluetooth ow ever Bluetooth is very slow on the iPhone 4


How much time for airplane to reach its destination if going at speed of 790 kilometers an hr for distance of 4700 kilometers?

dont now