Giant Jumbo Jets
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Author | : Marie Rogers |
Publisher | : 'The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc' |
Total Pages | : 24 |
Release | : 2021-07-15 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 1725326647 |
How can something as big as a jumbo jet get up into the air, let alone fly through the sky? Readers will discover how engineers design huge airplanes so they can fly, even though some are too big for most airports. Readers will learn how much cargo and how many people they can hold. Those interested in transportation and machines can study full-color photographs and marvel at the technological beauty of a jumbo jet.
Author | : Caroline Bingham |
Publisher | : DK Children |
Total Pages | : 40 |
Release | : 2001 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : |
Describes the features, history, and capabilities of old and new airplanes.
Author | : Chris Gall |
Publisher | : Roaring Brook Press |
Total Pages | : 25 |
Release | : 2020-08-04 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 1250799813 |
For the 50th anniversary of the Boeing 747’s first commercial flight, a picture book about the development of the iconic passenger plane and how it changed the history of air travel. In 1968, the biggest passenger jet the world had ever seen premiered in Everett, Washington. The giant plane was called the Boeing 747, but reporters named it “the Jumbo jet.” There was only one problem. It couldn’t fly. Yet. Jumbo details the story of the world’s first wide body passenger jet, which could hold more people than any other plane at the time and played a pivotal role in allowing middle class families to afford overseas travel. Author and illustrator Chris Gall, himself a licensed pilot, shows how an innovative design, hard work by countless people, and ground-breaking engineering put the Jumbo jet in the air. On January 22, 1970, the Boeing 747 made it's first transatlantic flight, taking passengers from New York to Paris in seven hours.
Author | : Richard de Crespigny |
Publisher | : Macmillan Publishers Aus. |
Total Pages | : 504 |
Release | : 2012-08-01 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1743347898 |
QF32 is the award winning bestseller from Richard de Crespigny, author of the forthcoming Fly!: Life Lessons from the Cockpit of QF32 On 4 November 2010, a flight from Singapore to Sydney came within a knife edge of being one of the world's worst air disasters. Shortly after leaving Changi Airport, an explosion shattered Engine 2 of Qantas flight QF32 - an Airbus A380, the largest and most advanced passenger plane ever built. Hundreds of pieces of shrapnel ripped through the wing and fuselage, creating chaos as vital flight systems and back-ups were destroyed or degraded. In other hands, the plane might have been lost with all 469 people on board, but a supremely experienced flight crew, led by Captain Richard de Crespigny, managed to land the crippled aircraft and safely disembark the passengers after hours of nerve-racking effort. Tracing Richard's life and career up until that fateful flight, QF32 shows exactly what goes into the making of a top-level airline pilot, and the extraordinary skills and training needed to keep us safe in the air. Fascinating in its detail and vividly compelling in its narrative, QF32 is the riveting, blow-by-blow story of just what happens when things go badly wrong in the air, told by the captain himself. Winner of ABIA Awards for Best General Non-fiction Book of the Year 2013 and Indie Awards' Best Non-fiction 2012 Shortlisted ABIA Awards' Book of the Year 2013
Author | : Ciandress Jackson |
Publisher | : eBookIt.com |
Total Pages | : 22 |
Release | : 2012-10-21 |
Genre | : Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | : 1456610880 |
In this introductory edition to the Chloe the Jumbo Jet Book Series, Chloe and pals go on their first mission as new jumbo jets at Wheels Up International Airport. Travel across the pond with Chloe and friends to see how they won Olympic Gold Medals!
Author | : Meish Goldish |
Publisher | : Bearport Publishing |
Total Pages | : 28 |
Release | : 2009-08-01 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 159716349X |
Discover the world’s biggest, most awesome airplanes! From immense passenger jets to king-sized cargo planes, the aircraft featured in this book all share one quality—they’re HUGE! Dazzling photos combined with fascinating information will engage kids as they learn all about these super-huge machines.
Author | : David E. Alexander |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 278 |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 9780813544793 |
What do a bumble bee and a 747 jet have in common? It's not a trick question. The fact is they have quite a lot in common. They both have wings. They both fly. And they're both ideally suited to it. They just do it differently. Why Don't Jumbo Jets Flap Their Wings? offers a fascinating explanation of how nature and human engineers each arrived at powered flight. What emerges is a highly readable account of two very different approaches to solving the same fundamental problems of moving through the air, including lift, thrust, turning, and landing. The book traces the slow and deliberate evolutionary process of animal flight--in birds, bats, and insects--over millions of years and compares it to the directed efforts of human beings to create the aircraft over the course of a single century. Among the many questions the book answers: Why are wings necessary for flight? How do different wings fly differently? When did flight evolve in animals? What vision, knowledge, and technology was needed before humans could learn to fly? Why are animals and aircrafts perfectly suited to the kind of flying they do? David E. Alexander first describes the basic properties of wings before launching into the diverse challenges of flight and the concepts of flight aerodynamics and control to present an integrated view that shows both why birds have historically had little influence on aeronautical engineering and exciting new areas of technology where engineers are successfully borrowing ideas from animals.
Author | : Guy Norris |
Publisher | : Zenith Imprint |
Total Pages | : 176 |
Release | : 2005 |
Genre | : Airbus A380 (Jet transport). |
ISBN | : 076032218X |
A revealing, behind-the-scenes look at the development of the biggest commercial aircraft ever built. With 200 colour photos, this book takes readers through the drama of the A380 project, introducing all the key players and unravelling the controversies surrounding its development.
Author | : Lance Cole |
Publisher | : Air World |
Total Pages | : 96 |
Release | : 2021-11-30 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9781526760029 |
Boeing's 747 'heavy' has achieved a fifty-year reign of the airways, but now airlines are retiring their fleets as a different type of long-haul airliner emerges. Yet the ultimate development of the 747, the -800 model, will ply the airways for many years to come. Even as twin-engine airliners increasingly dominate long-haul operations and the story of the four-engine Airbus A380 slows, the world is still a different place thanks to the great gamble that Boeing took with its 747. From early, difficult days designing and proving the world's biggest-ever airliner, the 747 has grown into a 400-ton leviathan capable of encircling the world. Boeing took a massive billion-dollar gamble and won. Taking its maiden flight in February 1969, designing and building the 747 was a huge challenge and involved new fields of aerospace technology. Multiple fail-safe systems were designed, and problems developing the engines put the whole programme at risk. Yet the issues were solved and the 747 flew like a dream said pilots - belying its size and sheer scale. With its distinctive hump and an extended upper-deck allied to airframe, avionics and engine developments, 747 became both a blue-riband airliner and, a mass-economy class travel device. Fitted with ultra-efficient Rolls-Royce engines, 747s became long-haul champions all over the world, notably on Pacific routes. across the Atlantic in January 1970, 747 became the must-have, four-engine, long haul airframe. Japan Airlines, for example, operated over sixty 747s in the world's biggest 747 fleet. By the renowned aviation author Lance Cole, this book provides a detailed yet engaging commentary on the design engineering and operating life and times of civil aviation's greatest sub-sonic achievement.
Author | : Kenny Allen |
Publisher | : Gareth Stevens Publishing LLLP |
Total Pages | : 26 |
Release | : 2012-08-01 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 143397178X |
Introduces jumbo jets and decribes the different parts to the jet that allows it to fly.