split flap - определение. Что такое split flap
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Что (кто) такое split flap - определение

AIRCRAFT WING DEVICE USED TO INCREASE LIFT BY EXTENDING THE TRAILING EDGE OF THE WING
Flaps (aircraft); Fowler flap; Airplane flaps; Wing flap; Trailing edge flaps; Fowler flaps; Slotted flap; Flap (aircraft); Split flap; Fairey-Youngman flap; Air flaps; Trailing-edge flaps; Zap flap
  • Flaps and high lift devices. Gurney flap exaggerated for clarity. Blown flap skipped as it is modified from any other type. Pale lines indicate line of movement, and green indicates flap setting used during dive.
  • Flaps during ground roll after landing, with spoilers up, increasing drag.
  • North American T-6 trainer, showing its split flaps

Split-flap display         
  • Solari board at Amtrak's 30th Street Station in Philadelphia in December 2018. The board was removed the following month and is now on static display at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania in Strasburg.
  • Schematic of a split-flap display in a digital clock display
  • Section of a split-flap display board at [[Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof]] (2005)
  • Frankfurt Airport, gate A check-in area (2009)
  • Flap departure board at [[Gare du Nord]], Paris (2007)
  • Solari Board at London Liverpool Street in 2003. This board has since been removed.
  • split-flap clock]]
  • An animation of how a split-flap display works
  • Working split-flap display at Seattle's [[Starbucks Reserve]] (2018)
  • A flap display in [[Taipei Railway Station]], Taiwan (2010)
  • Trenton]], [[New Jersey]] (2009)
ELECTROMECHANICAL DISPLAY DEVICE
Departure board; Split flap display; Flap display; Solari departure board; Flapper board; Flap display board; Solari Departure Board; Solari board; Split-flap clock; Destination board; Flight indicator; Flip Display; Flip-Display; Split flaps; Flapperboard
A split-flap display, or sometimes simply a flap display, is a digital electromechanical display device that presents changeable alphanumeric text, and occasionally fixed graphics.
Flap (aeronautics)         
A flap is a high-lift device used to reduce the stalling speed of an aircraft wing at a given weight. Flaps are usually mounted on the wing trailing edges of a fixed-wing aircraft.
Flap (surgery)         
  • Breast reconstruction using the latissimus dorsi muscle and an implant. This is an example of a pedicled musculocutaneous flap.
  • The distribution of the blood vessels in the skin of the sole of the foot. The dermis is referred to as corium.
  • [[Walter Yeo]], the first person to receive plastic surgery, before (left) and after(right) skin [[flap surgery]] performed by Sir Harold Delf Gillies in 1917. The surgery was some of the first to use a skin flap from an unaffected area of the body and paved the way for a sudden rash of improvements in this field.
TECHNIQUE IN PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
User:Taylornate/Flap; User:Taylornate/Surgical flap; User:Taylornate/Flap (surgical); User:Taylornate/Flap surgery; Flap surgery; Advancement flap
Flap surgery is a technique in plastic and reconstructive surgery where any type of tissue is lifted from a donor site and moved to a recipient site with an intact blood supply. This is distinct from a graft, which does not have an intact blood supply and therefore relies on growth of new blood vessels.

Википедия

Flap (aeronautics)

A flap is a high-lift device used to reduce the stalling speed of an aircraft wing at a given weight. Flaps are usually mounted on the wing trailing edges of a fixed-wing aircraft. Flaps are used to reduce the take-off distance and the landing distance. Flaps also cause an increase in drag so they are retracted when not needed.

The flaps installed on most aircraft are partial-span flaps; spanwise from near the wing root to the inboard end of the ailerons. When partial-span flaps are extended they alter the spanwise lift distribution on the wing by causing the inboard half of the wing to supply an increased proportion of the lift, and the outboard half to supply a reduced proportion of the lift. Reducing the proportion of the lift supplied by the outboard half of the wing is accompanied by a reduction in the angle of attack on the outboard half. This is beneficial because it increases the margin above the stall of the outboard half, maintaining aileron effectiveness and reducing the likelihood of asymmetric stall, and spinning.

Extending the wing flaps increases the camber or curvature of the wing, raising the maximum lift coefficient or the upper limit to the lift a wing can generate. This allows the aircraft to generate the required lift at a lower speed, reducing the minimum speed (known as stall speed) at which the aircraft will safely maintain flight. The increase in camber also increases the wing drag, which can be beneficial during approach and landing, because it allows the aircraft to descend at a steeper angle. For most aircraft configurations, a useful side effect of flap deployment is a decrease in aircraft pitch angle which lowers the nose thereby improving the pilot's view of the runway over the nose of the aircraft during landing. Another side effect however, depending on the type of flap, location on the wing and deployment speed during their extension, is that the flaps will cause the indicated (or relative to the unchanged airfoil) angle of attack to lower within a short time due to an increase in nose-down pitching moment which is characteristic to all trailing-edge flaps, as well as leading-edge flaps, then followed by a nose rise (pitch-up) due to the increase in lift, thus obscuring the pilot's view of the runway if no action is taken over the pitch inputs.

There are many different designs of flaps, with the specific choice depending on the size, speed and complexity of the aircraft on which they are to be used, as well as the era in which the aircraft was designed. Plain flaps, slotted flaps, and Fowler flaps are the most common. Krueger flaps are positioned on the leading edge of the wings and are used on many jet airliners.

The Fowler, Fairey-Youngman and Gouge types of flap increase the wing area in addition to changing the camber. The larger lifting surface reduces wing loading, hence further reducing the stalling speed.

Some flaps are fitted elsewhere. Leading-edge flaps form the wing leading edge and when deployed they rotate down to increase the wing camber. The de Havilland DH.88 Comet racer had flaps running beneath the fuselage and forward of the wing trailing edge. Many of the Waco Custom Cabin series biplanes have the flaps at mid-chord on the underside of the top wing.