Some airplanes are always steered by the rudder
Some are steered by a tail wheel coupled to the rudder
Some are steered by the brakes at low speed
some are steered by the nose wheel at low speed by a tiny steering wheel on the instrument panel
All (almost) airplanes have the ability to steer with the brakes
It is simply a plane surface making an angle with the horizontal (ground).
You wouldn't drive a plane, you would fly one. One the ground the term then would be to "taxi" a plane
it is the Transverse plane. the transverse, or horizontal plane is a crosswise plane that runs parallel to the ground. this imaginary cut would divide the body or its parts into upper and lower portions.
fly in close to the ground and then cut the throttle at about a foot or above depending on the size of the plane.
Its when a plane gets cut in half by Godzilla, and then its just laying there on the ground open.
on the ground
It is an air-balloon which can be steered in the air.
Synonyms for steered included guided, directed.
Steer is a noun and a verb.
Steered is the past tense of steer: He steered the car into the space perfectly on his first try.
Both - you fly it in the air, but you drive it on the ground.
Dead because they died when they steered the plane into the buildings but the organiser ossama bin laden was in hiding while it happened but was caught in may 2011 and was killed
Yes, it does, unless it's part of a "no ground plane" kit. "No ground plane" is a misnomer, since the outer conductor on the coax is in fact the ground plane in these kits and is a specially made and tuned part that should not be altered. The fiberglass whip that you're asking about is actually 1/2 of a dipole, the other half is the ground plane. Both must work together for efficient signal propagation and be tuned in the mounted location.
The plane was on the ground, not flying in the air.
It is simply a plane surface making an angle with the horizontal (ground).
Into a container in the plane where it can be removed when the plane is back on the ground.
Taxiing