Airplanes
Control Surfaces
Landing gear and Brakes
Power Plant
Airworthiness/POH
100

Houses the cabin and flight deck.

What is the fuselage?

100

Attached to the back of the vertical stabilizer. It creates aerodynamic forces that move the nose of the aircraft left or right (yaw).

What is the rudder?

100

Landing gear with a rear mounted wheel.

What is conventional landing gear or tailwheel?

100

This includes the engine and propeller in small airplanes.

What id the powerplant section?


100

Must be displayed in a location where passengers can see it.

What is an airworthiness certificate?

200

This design uses formers, bulkhead and stringers.

What is Semi-monocoque?

200

Attached on the inner portion of the wing. When extended they increase the wings lift for takeoff and landing.

What are the flaps?

200

Landing gear with two main gear(wheels) and one nose wheel.

What is tricycle landing gear?


200

This protects the aircraft occupants and serves as a mounting point for the engine.

What is the firewall?

200

Acronym used to verify required documents are on board the airplane.

What is ARROW? Airworthiness, Registration, Radio Station Class License, Operating Limitations, Weight and Balance Data.

300

Typically consists of vertical stabilizer, horizontal stabilizer, and the elevator.

What is the empennage?

300

Attached to the back of the horizontal stabilizer. When moved, allows the airplanes nose to pitch up or down.

What is the elevator?

300

The wheels of an airplane are attached to the aircraft structure using these and that absorb shock of landing and taxing over rough ground.

What are struts?

300

This encloses the engine compartment which streamlines the airplane and increases engine cooling effectiveness by ducting air around the cylinders.

What is the engine cowling?

300

Where you can find most pertinent information about a particular make and model of airplane and must be accessible to the pilot in flight.

What is the POH (Pilot Operating Handbook)?

400

Air flows around these and generates lift, which is essential for flight.

What are the wings?

400

Small hinged devices attached to the trailing edge of one or more control surfaces and help minimize pilot workload.

What are trim tabs?

400

Typical training airplanes use these and can be applied by pressing on the top of each rudder pedal.

What are disc brakes?

400

Mounted on the front of the engine, translates rotational force of the engine into a forward acting force called thrust.

What is the propeller?

400

Time frame used for most inspections and certificates experation.

What is calendar month?

500

Located on the outside portion of the each wing, normally connected to the control wheel by chains, cables, bell cranks, and pulleys. When moving the control wheel, these move in opposite directions creating aerodynamic forces that roll the airplane.

What are the ailerons?

500

A one piece horizontal stabilizer used on some empennage designs.

What is a stabilator?

500

Using this technique can help steer the airplane while taxiing.

What is differential braking?

500

The primary function of the engine.

What is providing power to turn the propeller?

500

Published by the FAA when an unsafe condition might exist or develop in an aircraft because of a design defect, maintenance or another cause.

What is an airworthiness directive (AD)?

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