circles, spheres and cylinders hold pressure well, because the pressure is evenly distributed. There's less likelihood of a rupture in thin material.
Stow your gear toward the front of the fuselage, please. The fuselage is the aircraft's main body section.
Typically, the serial number of any aircraft is found on the tail section, but, some aircraft have that number on the fuselage section.
an aircraft's main body section that holds crew and passengers or cargo.
Fuselage is known as the main body of an aircraft. This is usually the section that holds the crew members or the cargo. In a single-engine aircraft this is the part that holds the engine.
Any aircraft's body parts are called the Fuselage,(main body) the wings and the tail section.
for flight characteristic to be stable during flight at fuselage mid to aft section
The area where the landing gear of the aircraft is stored when it is retracted. This is at the bottom of the fuselage (mid-section) for the big jets and in the engine nacelle for most commercial turboprops.
This is a trick question right? The length of an aircraft is the longest portion of the airplane (usually the fuselage) If you are asking about published ratings this would be with out optional probes and nose extensions etc.
Fuselage
A circular section refers to a part or segment of a larger circular object or shape. It typically describes a section that is formed by cutting or dividing the circular object along a specific path or line. The circular section retains the characteristics and properties of the original circular shape.
A cylinder has a circular cross section that is parallel to its base.
Working on the actual aircraft itself: Fuselage, wings, tail section (the actual structure). Not the landing gear, instruments, engine, lights, fuel lines, wires, etc. 1. Aircraft bodies are called the "fuselage." 2. Ship and tank bodies are called the "hull." 3. The body of a car is sometimes called the chasis (which is really the under-carriage or the steel frame supporting the car's body). 4. The main body of a firearm is called the "reciever (and/or frame or action)."