Talk:Ground loop (aviation)

Latest comment: 3 years ago by Dolphin51 in topic Aeroplane and "Conventional" gear

Request edit

Peharps it could be improved by explaining how ground loop occurs under control and how to recover incipent ones. Thanks En51cm 18:31, 7 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

While not moving? edit

"Ground loops occur when the aircraft is moving on the ground..." Can a ground loop occur when the plane is NOT moving? Sudden high engine torque while parked, for example. Binksternet 20:26, 27 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

Aeroplane and "Conventional" gear edit

Can we please spell airplane correctly? 'Aeroplane' is the obsolete form. Also, can we just call the gear "tail wheel" instead of "conventional" - again, since tricycle gear has been the de-facto "conventional" gear arrangement for many decades now, and no one refers to tail wheel (or tail-draggers) as "conventional" in this day and time. In fact, tricycle gear is the reason we don't hear much about Ground Loops anymore for the reasons mentioned in the article. The terms used in this article as currently written gives the impression that it was composed in 1950 or so. Why not update it to post-1950 terminology and standards? It's a good article... the terminology just needs an update. 73.6.96.168 (talk) 12:02, 20 August 2020 (UTC)Reply

Spelling of airplane and aeroplane: Aeroplane is not an obsolete form of the word; and airplane is not the contemporary form. Aeroplane is the correct spelling in British English, and airplane is the correct spelling in American English. English Wikipedia aims to have all its articles either consistently in British English or consistently in American English - not a mixture of the two. Wikipedia does not prefer one or the other, and does not condone the wholesale conversion of an article from one form to the other; but Wikipedia encourages changes from one form to another of a small number of spellings in order to achieve consistently British or consistently American spelling throughout the article. Please have a look at the following informative sites:
Some articles have been formally determined to be written in one of these two national varieties of English. Once that has happened a suitable banner is placed at the top of the Talk page. For example, at the top of Talk:Franklin D. Roosevelt there are numerous banners in parchment color - one banner near the middle of all these banners shows an American flag and says "This article is written in American English ... ..."
At the top of Talk:Winston Churchill there is the same assortment of banners in parchment color - one of the banners near the middle of this assortment shows a British flag and says "This article is written in British English ... ..." Dolphin (t) 12:46, 20 August 2020 (UTC)Reply