runway$71427$ - traducción al holandés
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runway$71427$ - traducción al holandés

LIGHTING SYSTEM USED TO IDENTIFY THE PERIMETER OF AN AIRPORT RUNWAY
High Intensity Runway Lights; HIRL; Medium Intensity Runway Lights; Low Intensity Runway Lights; LIRL; Runway Edge Lights; Runway edge light
  • An aircraft landing at [[Zurich International Airport]], with runway edge lights visible

runway      
n. loop; pad; sponning; start of landingsbaan
landing strip         
  • Runway sign at [[Madrid-Barajas Airport]], Spain
  • A320]] cockpit
  • [[Approach lighting system]] at [[Berlin Tegel Airport]]
  • Ground light at [[Bremen Airport]]
  • Triangular runway pattern at Armitage Field, [[Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake]]
  • Badminton]], [[South Gloucestershire]], [[England]]. The strip is very simple: no lighting, no centerline, and no approach aids. The edge is marked by simple posts.
  • A [[Mahan Air]] [[Airbus A310]] using [[reverse thrust]] in rainy weather at [[Düsseldorf Airport]]
  • An [[MD-11]] at one end of a runway
  • [[FAA]] airport diagram at [[O'Hare International Airport]]. The two 14/32 runways go from upper left to lower right, the two 4/22 runways go from lower left to upper right, and the two 9/27 and three 10/28 runways are horizontal.
  • hydroplaning]].
  • 650px
  • Runway 22
  • Runway 34 at [[Nagoya Airfield]]
  • A runway landing light from 1945
  • Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport (KBJC)]]
  • center
  • center
  • center
  • Font and size of numbers and letters
AREA OF SURFACE USED BY AIRCRAFT TO TAKEOFF FROM AND LAND ON
Runways; Runway lighting; Active runway; Active Runway; Airplane Landing Field; Blast pad; RWY; Landing field length; Landing filed length; Landing strip; Takeoff Run Available; Takeoff Distance Available; Accelerate Stop Distance Available; Landing Distance Available; Runway Strip; Runway strip; Blast pads; Blast Pad; Blast Pads; Runway end lights; Runway Centerline Lighting System; Runway Centerline Light System; TDZL; Touchdown Zone Lights; Taxiway Centerline Lead-Off Lights; Taxiway Centerline Lead-On Lights; Visual Runway; Visual runway; Visual Runways; Visual runways; Non-precision instrument runways; Non-precision instrument runway; Non-Precision Instrument Runways; Non-Precision Instrument Runway; Non-precision Instrument Runways; Non-precision Instrument Runway; Precision instrument runways; Precision Instrument Runway; TODA; Land and Hold Short Lights; Parallel runway; Landing strips; Airport runway; Runway light; Stopway; Landing distance available; Runway naming; Runway numbering; Runway markings; Grass airstrip; Runway designation
landingsbaan
fashion show         
  • Example of an elaborate stage set used for the Chanel Haute Couture Fall-Winter 2011 show
  • Fashion sketching before live runway presentation
  • Finnish actress [[Elina Salo]] presenting clothes designed by [[Vuokko Nurmesniemi]] at a fashion show in the [[Helsinki Botanical Garden]] in 1958
  • Models on the runway at [[São Paulo Fashion Week]], 2017
  • Paris fashion and runway at the turn of the century
DISPLAYING LATEST CLOTHING AND APPAREL COLLECTION ON LIVE MANNEQUIN.
Catwalk; Catwalk model; Runway (fashion); Fashion shows; Ramp (fashion); Catwalks; Fashion Show; Catwalk (fashion); Catwalk (documentary); Fashion show lighting; Fashion parade; Runway show; Fashion runway; Ramp walk
modeshow

Definición

Runway
·noun The channel of a stream.
II. Runway ·noun The beaten path made by deer or other animals in passing to and from their feeding grounds.

Wikipedia

Runway edge lights

Runway edge lighting are used to outline the edges of runways during periods of darkness or restricted visibility conditions. These light systems are classified according to the intensity they are capable of producing:

  • High intensity runway lights (HIRL)
  • Medium intensity runway lights (MIRL)
  • Low intensity runway lights (LIRL)

Many HIRL and MIRL systems have variable intensity controls, whereas the LIRLs normally have one intensity setting. At airports where there is a control tower, the tower will manage the lights to account for visibility and pilot preference, but some airports do not have control towers. These airports will have Pilot Controlled Lighting, or PCL, where pilots can adjust the lighting themselves by keying a microphone button a certain number of times.

The majority of runway edge lights are clear or white, but there are some exceptions to provide additional information to pilots in certain circumstances.

When an instrument runway lighting is designed, the last 600 metres (2,000 ft), or one-half of the runway length available (whichever is less), are bi-directional. They look white to the pilot approaching from the short end of the runway, but to a pilot approaching from the other end, who would be landing or taking off in that direction, they are yellow to indicate that the runway is nearing the end.