Anti Cavitation Anode also for anti corrosion. supposedly also can be adjusted for steering alignment or torque steer
it my not your
Body prop is where you use you body to create props
caudal fin-the tail pectoral fin-the tail on the ventral side of the shark just above the pelvic fins pelvic fin- the underside fins that serve as the "arms" of the shark dorsal fin-the top fin that is usually seen on the surface of water in shark attacks
caudal fin-the tail pectoral fin-the tail on the ventral side of the shark just above the pelvic fins pelvic fin- the underside fins that serve as the "arms" of the shark dorsal fin-the top fin that is usually seen on the surface of water in shark attacks
A tap root is just one big root like a carrot and a prop root grows above the ground
On prop driven aircraft the torque created by the engine, along with other forces, creates a left turning tendency. The pilot must compensate for this by adding right rudder. Keep in mind that on US prop built aircraft the prop turns clockwise (as seen from the cockpit) and the prop torque is as stated above. However, on many European designed aircraft, the prop turns counter clockwise and therefore, the prop torque produces a right turning tendency.
Check if the sacrificial anode above the propeller is supposed to be the type with a fin. The angle of the fin can be set to adjust for the leaning
The fin on the back of an orca is called the dorsal fin.
The dorsal fin is the fin on the back of a fish, for example the typical triangular fin on the back of a shark is its dorsal fin.
An adipose fin is a soft, fleshy fin found on a fish behind the dorsal fin and ahead of the caudal fin.
They allow the shark to swim. A shark with no fins would be unable to swim. Any individual fin provides steering and propulsion depending on exactly which fin you're talking about. The dorsal fin (the one on top of the shark that sticks up above the water in any cartoon about a shark) is mainly for steering.
If you mean a fin like a fish fin, there is a word, but mostlly each one is different; Lā (fin). Anal fin, kuaalo. Caudal fin, hiʻu. Dorsal fin, kualā. Pectoral fin, etc. If you mean fin, like 'the end', it is pau'ana.