Ur dead!
The speed of the motor vehicle is gently slowed down. The more aggressive the brakes are applied the faster the vehicle slows down eventually coming to a full stop.
Shorting the motor's electrical supply will blow the fuse and the motor will run down and stop.
Start the motor and then put it in gear. Point it down hill and release the brakes
motor brakes? parking brake is engaged? transmission malfunction?
If you don't vchange it then your motor will break down and you will be n very big trouble.
A very larg helicopter may be able to take off with an added 50,000 lbs. of weight. A good sized modern train is going to be significantly larger than this. The helicopter's blades would likely give out as they are suddenly reversed if you just "slammed on the brakes" so to speak. If you had the helicopter going at the same speed as the train, and slowled the helicopter down as much as possible, the train would eventually stop if the locomotives were not powering the wheels (it would stop without the helicopter, too, and would be infinitely safer for the helicopter pilot). If the locomotive is powering the wheels, the helicopter's not going to do a whole lot.
That happens when the supply is turned off, and the motor runs down and stops.
The same force as the weight of the helicopter and its crew and cargo.
Assuming you are not pressing down on the gas, when you release the pedal, the car will slow down over time and evetualy come to a stop. Unless you are going down a hill, in which case you will speed up.
the brakes or the emrgen see brakes
i think it does when it lands but in the air, NO
yes but when a emp hits a helicopter it will shut down all electronics in the helicopter then losing controle of it self then it will crash