- pilot steering
- пилотирование, выполняемое лётчиком, пилотирование вручную
Englsh-Russian aviation and space dictionary. - M.: Military publishing house USSR Ministry of Defence. edited by M. Murashkevich. 1974.
Englsh-Russian aviation and space dictionary. - M.: Military publishing house USSR Ministry of Defence. edited by M. Murashkevich. 1974.
Pilot-induced oscillation — occurs when the pilot of an aircraft inadvertently commands an often increasing series of corrections in opposite directions, each an attempt to cover the aircraft s reaction to the previous input with an overcorrection in the opposite direction … Wikipedia
pilot house — noun A shelter for steering gear and pilot (also called wheelhouse) • • • Main Entry: ↑pilot * * * pilot house, or pi|lot|house «PY luht HOWS», noun. an enclosed place on the upper deck of a ship, sheltering the steering wheel and other… … Useful english dictionary
pilot — n. person who flies aircraft 1) an air force; airline, commercial; fighter; glider; helicopter; kamikaze; licensed; test pilot person who guides ships into and out of a port 2) to drop; take on the pilot 3) a harbor pilot device for steering 4)… … Combinatory dictionary
pilot — [16] Pilot comes ultimately from a Greek word for ‘oar’, pēdón, which went back to the same Indo European base as produced English foot. Its plural, pēdá, was used for ‘rudder’, and from this was derived medieval Greek *pēdótēs ‘rudder, helmsman’ … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
pilot — [16] Pilot comes ultimately from a Greek word for ‘oar’, pēdón, which went back to the same Indo European base as produced English foot. Its plural, pēdá, was used for ‘rudder’, and from this was derived medieval Greek *pēdótēs ‘rudder, helmsman’ … Word origins
pilot — I. noun Etymology: Middle French pilote, from Italian pilota, alteration of pedota, from Middle Greek *pēdōtēs, from Greek pēda steering oars, plural of pēdon oar; probably akin to Greek pod , pous foot more at foot Date: 1530 1. a. one employed… … New Collegiate Dictionary
pilot — {{11}}pilot (n.) 1510s, one who steers a ship, from M.Fr. pillot, from It. piloto, O.It. pedoto, usually said to be from Medieval Gk. *pedotes rudder, helmsman, from Gk. pedon steering oar, related to pous (gen. podos) foot (see FOOT (Cf. foot)) … Etymology dictionary
steering wheel — /ˈstɪərɪŋ wil/ (say stearring weel) noun a wheel turned by the driver, pilot, etc., in steering a motor vehicle, ship, etc …
pilot house — /ˈpaɪlət haʊs/ (say puyluht hows) noun an enclosed place on the deck of a vessel, for the steering gear and the pilot; a wheelhouse …
steering wheel — a wheel used by a driver, pilot, or the like, to steer an automobile, ship, etc. [1740 50] * * * … Universalium
steering wheel — steer′ing wheel n. aum naut. navig. a wheel held and turned by a driver, pilot, or the like, to steer an automobile, ship, etc • Etymology: 1740–50 … From formal English to slang