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Aviation Supplies & Academics, Inc.
Settore: Aviation
Number of terms: 16387
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
Aviation Supplies & Academics, Inc. (ASA) develops and markets aviation supplies, software, and books for pilots, flight instructors, flight engineers, airline professionals, air traffic controllers, flight attendants, aviation technicians and enthusiasts. Established in 1947, ASA also provides ...
A sudden significant increase in station pressure.
Industry:Aviation
A sudden, short-duration surge of high voltage along a power line or in a piece of electrical equipment. Voltage spikes are induced into the system by lightning or by some inductive equipment being turned off. These high-voltage spikes can damage many types of semiconductor devices. Surge protectors are used to bypass voltage spikes to ground, so they cannot cause damage.
Industry:Aviation
A supporting fixture used to hold an aircraft structure while it is being repaired or stored. The cradle is padded so it will not damage the lightweight aircraft structure placed in it.
Industry:Aviation
A surface active agent, or partially soluble contaminant which is a by-product of fuel processing or of fuel additives. Surfactants adhere to other contaminants and cause them to drop out of the fuel and settle to the bottom of the fuel tank as sludge.
Industry:Aviation
A surface much like a short stub wing that extends out on the side of a flying boat hull near the waterline. Sponsons keep the flying boat level when it is not moving through the water, and they also give it stability and provide some aerodynamic lift.
Industry:Aviation
A surface that is curved inward with the outer edges higher than the center.
Industry:Aviation
A surface that is curved outward with its outer edges lower than the center.
Industry:Aviation
A surface which supports a moving load. Bearing surfaces are normally treated in some way to decrease the friction between the surface and the load being moved.
Industry:Aviation
A surface, interface, or transition zone of discontinuity between two adjacent air masses having different densities. More simply, a front is the boundary between two different air masses. frontal zone (meteorology). A front or zone with a marked increase-of-density gradient. The term frontal zone is used because fronts are not truly a ‘surface’ of discontinuity, but, rather, a ‘zone’ of rapid transition of meteorological elements.
Industry:Aviation
A suspension of small globules of one material in another, when the two materials will not mix. Oil and water will not mix, but they can be formed into an emulsion. An emulsion will separate into its components when it is allowed to sit.
Industry:Aviation