ChatterBank1 min ago
Aeroplane wings
4 Answers
Are Aeroplane wings connected to each other in the centre of the plane or separately attached to the fuselage ?
Thanks in advance.
Thanks in advance.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mortartube (unique name) isn't far off. In the early days of airplane building, a single piece of (usually) Spruce was used as the main spar and carried thorugh the fuselage for the primary support structure for both wings.
Later, it became more efficient (and easier to repair) wings that are attached to a structure within the fuselage. In WWII (actually in the 1930's) Douglas manufactured the venerable C-47/DC-3 (I think you Brits called it the Dakota was bolted on each side through flanges that ran around the top and bottom of the wings, as seen
here ... (sorry for the long URL.)
The First American jet transport (Boeing 707) was designed so the wing would flex through an arc of about 5 feet in flight. The Boeing 747 wing flexed nearly 20 feet seen in this photo: http://www.airplane-pictures.net/image5856.htm l . This could only be achieved by the attachment of the wings to the center section. Thanks for the question!
Later, it became more efficient (and easier to repair) wings that are attached to a structure within the fuselage. In WWII (actually in the 1930's) Douglas manufactured the venerable C-47/DC-3 (I think you Brits called it the Dakota was bolted on each side through flanges that ran around the top and bottom of the wings, as seen
here ... (sorry for the long URL.)
The First American jet transport (Boeing 707) was designed so the wing would flex through an arc of about 5 feet in flight. The Boeing 747 wing flexed nearly 20 feet seen in this photo: http://www.airplane-pictures.net/image5856.htm l . This could only be achieved by the attachment of the wings to the center section. Thanks for the question!
My Dad was in the RAF in Egypt immediately after WW2 and at his airfield they had all sorts of aircraft, allied and axis, passing through. One day a Dakota came in and damaged its wing on landing. There were no spare parts available, and none coming in the foreseeable future, so they went to a wrecked DC2 at the other end of the airfield and nicked the wing off of that. Result...the worlds only DC 2 1/2!!