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AIRCRAFT M

Horizontales
Hinged sections of the trailing edge of the left and right wing, which operate in series to provide lateral control. When one aileron is raised, the opposite is lowered, producing rolling movements around the longitudinal axis of the aircraft.
A circumferential structural member in the body that supports the stringers and skin; used in semimonocoque construction.
A fixed horizontal tail surface that serves to maintain stability around the lateral axis of an aircraft.
Sometimes referred to as vertical stabilizer or fin.lt is fixed to provide directional stability. The trailing edge is hinged to form the rudder.
The hinged section of the horizontal stabilizer used to increase or decrease the angle of attack of the airplane.
On small aircraft, the area occupied by the pilot and passengers. On cabin airplanes, if the pilot compartment is separated from the rest of the cabin, it is often called the cockpit
A principal longitudinal member of the framing of an aircraft fuselage or nacelle. It is usually continuous across a number of points of support.
Verticales
Longitudinal member in the fuselage or spanwise members in the wing to transmit skin loads into the body frames or wing ribs
The hinged and removable sides of the pods or nacelles that cover the engines.
A beam or member supported at or near one end only without external bracing.
A heavy structural member in the fuselage to contain pressure or fluids or to disperse concentrated loads. A heavy circumferential frame, which may or may not be entirely closed by a web.
A piece, part, or structure, having a smooth streamlined contour, used to cover a nonstreamlined object or to smooth a junction
A fireproof or fire-resistant wall or bulkhead separating an engine from the rest of the aircraft structure to prevent the spread of a fire from the engine compartment.
A surface such as an airplane wing, aileron, or rudder designed to obtain reaction from the air through which it moves.
A supporting brace that bears compression loads, tension loads, or both, as in a fuselage between the longerons or in a landing gear to transmit the airplane loads.