enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Simple Plastic Airplane Design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Plastic_Airplane_Design

    Good trainer planes and gliders can be made from SPADs. SPAD modelers make equally good advanced planes that can be made with corrugated plastic. They include: RC Airplane Combat, 3D Flying, and are preferred in places where the flyers would normally not risk a more expensive plane and yet want the same flying characteristics of balsa planes.

  3. Radio-controlled aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio-controlled_aircraft

    An RC flyer demonstrating knife edge flying. A radio-controlled aircraft (often called RC aircraft or RC plane) is a small flying machine that is radio controlled by an operator on the ground using a hand-held radio transmitter.

  4. Sardinella tawilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardinella_tawilis

    Sardinella tawilis (the freshwater sardinella, freshwater herring, bombon sardine or freshwater sardine) is a freshwater sardine found exclusively in the Philippines.It is the only member of the genus Sardinella known to exist entirely in fresh water. [2]

  5. Free flight (model aircraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_flight_(model_aircraft)

    F1B Model by Stepan Stepanchuk. Free flight is the segment of model aviation involving aircraft with no active external control after launch. Free Flight is the original form of hobby aeromodeling, with the competitive objective being to build and launch a self controlling aircraft that will consistently achieve the longest flight duration over multiple competition rounds, within various class ...

  6. King Oscar (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Oscar_(company)

    In 1880, Norwegian fish canneries began exporting sardines. [2] At the World's Fair in Chicago in 1893, the Norwegian exhibition included smoked sardines. [3]In 1903, a year after royal permission had been granted, Chr. Bjelland & Co. first began exporting the King Oscar brand of sardines to the United States, and by 1920, the brand was established in the USA and British markets. [4]

  7. Sardines as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardines_as_food

    Sardines represent more than 62% of the Moroccan fish catch and account for 91% of raw material usage in the domestic canning industry. Some 600,000 tonnes of fresh sardines are processed each year by the industry. Famous Moroccan recipes include Moroccan fried stuffed sardines and Moroccan sardine balls in spicy tomato sauce.

  8. Sardine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardine

    Sardine and pilchard are common names for various species of small, oily forage fish in the herring suborder Clupeoidei. [2] The term 'sardine' was first used in English during the early 15th century; a somewhat dubious etymology says it comes from the Italian island of Sardinia, around which sardines were once supposedly abundant.

  9. Sardinella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardinella

    Sardinella is a genus of fish in the family Dorosomatidae found in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Ocean.They are abundant in warmer waters of the tropical and subtropical oceans.