4 forces
axes of movement
axial movements
Simultaneous movements
100
Wha are the 4 forces that act upon an aircraft?

Weight, Lift, Thrust, Drag

100

What are the 3 axes of an aircraft?

Longitudinal, lateral, and vertical

100

What are the 3 axial movements of an aircraft?

Roll, Pitch, and Yaw

100

Why do we need to use all 3 movements/axes when flying?

To have an efficient flight.
200
How does a glider move through the air if it has no engine?

The state of equilibrium; when lift, weight, and drag are perfectly balanced.

200

What's an axis?

An imaginary line running through the center of gravity and it has its own rotation.

200

Which movement is also called "bank"?

Roll

200

For a level turn, why do pilots use yaw and roll? 

If not, the turn will be VERY slow.

300

True or false, the two pairs are weight/thrust, and lift/drag.

False, it's weight/lift, and lift/drag.

300

Show us from where the longitudinal axis runs through.

through the fuselage, nose to tail
300

Associate each movement with its axis.

roll=longitudinal

pitch=lateral

yaw=vertical

300

Demonstrate a climbing turn, and explain when the axes are used.

pitch to gain altitude, yaw is to turn, roll is to avoid gaining more altitude/distance.

400

What is thrust, and what part of an aircraft allows that function?

Thrust helps the aircraft move forward, and it's the engine. 


400

Where do all 3 axes intersect?

The center of gravity

400

Act out all 3 movements. 

roll=leaning

pitch=up/down

yaw=turn

500

What is the synonym of "weight"?

Gravity

500

Act out the vertical and lateral axes.

hand on head/ horizontaly

500

When a pilot wants to gain altitude, which movement do they use?

pitch