military and airports also anyone who carries high level aircraft
Avgas, or if it has a jet engine, it would use either Jet-A1 or Jet-B fuel.
Another word for a jet engine is a turbojet. This term specifically refers to a type of jet engine that uses a gas turbine to produce thrust. Other related terms include turbofan and turbo-prop, which refer to different designs and applications of jet propulsion systems.
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A jet plane uses a jet engine's thrust for propulsion. A propeller is a set of blades somewhat like a big fan that blows air to the back of the plane for thrust instead of using a jet engine for the thrust to move the plane forward.
jet engine
Frank Whittle was the invetor of the jet engine.
You can but a mini jet engine on ebay.
there is apparently a jet engine designed in new zealand by a josh and camden Thompson that exhilarates its self its turbo jet design bringing the ids infinite drive system compresses the air and fuel then uses the rear fan to push even more air and compress even more ask your q about the infinite turbo jet
A Pulse Jet is a type of jet that uses a pulse jet engine for propulsion. The jet engine works by using pulse combinations of combustion. This is called "resonant combustion". The engine requires very little moving parts.
The Germans invented the first operational jet engine during WW2.
A jet engine uses fuel from the aircraft's fuel tanks, but gets its oxidizer from oxygen in the air. So it won't work in space, where there is no air. A similar engine that carried its own oxygen would be called a "rocket", and WOULD work in space - because it wouldn't need air.
Yes. Military Unmaned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) use jet ski engines to power them. The Predetor drone uses a Honda from memory.