if you dont know how to do it
rub a peice of bread up and down ur but and play with ur di ck
yes, a current of air forced backwards causes the air craft to move.
A propeller vehicle uses air resistance to generate forward thrust. As the propeller spins, it creates a pressure difference between the front and back of the propeller, causing the vehicle to move forward. The air resistance acts against the motion of the propeller, helping to propel the vehicle forward.
Air is forced into the lungs.
You're probably referring to the term "slipstream", which is sometimes used synonymously with "prop wash".
Air leakage increases.
A propeller moves an object by generating thrust through the rotation of its blades. As the blades spin, they create a pressure difference between the front and back of the propeller, pushing air or water in one direction and creating a force that propels the object forward.
you use the mini screwdriver that came with it and on the propeller should be a screw on top and you unscrew it and pop it of with the tool that came with the air hog and apply the new one and make sure its on tight and then screw the screw back in and then your done.
On compression the air is compressed, and on exhaust it is forced out of the cylinder.On compression the air is compressed, and on exhaust it is forced out of the cylinder.
A pull propeller is more efficient due to the fact it is in clean/non turbulent air.
A boomerang is a angled or bent stick that when thrown in the air comes back to the thrower when it does not hit an object. A propeller is a straight crafted out stick that when attached to the engine makes the airplane move forward.
The propeller turns many revolutions per minute and deflects air behind it .
When you release a balloon with air in it, the air inside the balloon is pushed out, causing the balloon to fly through the air. This happens because the air being forced out creates a force in the opposite direction, propelling the balloon forward.