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Aircraft includes other things that travel in the air like helicopters and blimps.

2006-10-02 21:26:06 · answer #1 · answered by Kuji 7 · 0 0

Aeroplane and aircraft can be used as synonym however the difference could be as under:
Aeroplane: Any machine supported for flight in the air by buoyancy or by the dynamic action of air on its surfaces, esp. powered air.

Aircaraft: A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust exerted by the passing air on its fixed wings and driven by propellers, jet propulsion, etc.

2006-10-02 21:35:10 · answer #2 · answered by chapatchapat 2 · 0 0

The term aeroplane typically refers to any fixed-wing aircraft, also known as airplane.

A fixed-wing aircraft (commonly called airplane in North America and aeroplane in Commonwealth countries and Ireland, from Greek: aéros- "air" and -planos "wandering" — often shortened to just plane in both cases) is a heavier-than-air craft where movement of the wings in relation to the aircraft is not used to generate lift. The term is used to distinguish from rotary-wing aircraft, where the movement of the lift surfaces relative to the aircraft generates lift. A rarer type of aircraft that is neither fixed-wing nor rotary-wing is an ornithopter. A heliplane is both fixed-wing and rotary-wing.

Fixed-wing aircraft include a large range of craft from small trainers and recreational aircraft to large airliners and military cargo aircraft. Some aircraft use fixed wings to provide lift only part of the time and may or may not be referred to as fixed-wing.

The current term also embraces aircraft with folding wings that are intended to fold when on the ground. This is usually to ease storage or facilitate transport on, for example, a vehicle trailer or the powered lift connecting the hangar deck of an aircraft carrier to its flight deck. It also embraces "variable geometry" aircraft, such as the General Dynamics F-111, Grumman F-14 Tomcat and the Panavia Tornado, which can vary the sweep angle of their wings during flight. There are also rare examples of aircraft which can vary the angle of incidence of their wings in flight, such the F-8 Crusader, which are also considered to be "fixed-wing".

Two necessities for all fixed-wing aircraft (as well as rotary-wing aircraft) are air flow over the wings for lifting of the aircraft, and an open area for landing. The majority of aircraft, however, also need an airport with the infrastructure to receive maintenance, restocking, refueling and for the loading and unloading of crew, cargo and/or passengers. While the vast majority of aircraft land and take off on land, some are capable of take off and landing on ice, snow and calm water.

The aircraft is the second fastest method of transport, after the rocket. Commercial jet aircraft can reach up to 875 km/h. Single-engined aircraft are capable of reaching 175 km/h or more at cruise speed. Supersonic aircraft (military, research and a few private aircraft) can reach speeds faster than sound. The speed record for a plane powered by an air-breathing engine is currently held by the experimental NASA X-43, which reached nearly ten times the speed of sound.

The biggest aircraft currently in service is Antonov An-225, while the fastest is Mikoyan MiG-31. The biggest supersonic jet ever produced and currently in service is Tupolev-160.

You could view types of fixed-wing aircraft at the links below.

2006-10-03 03:42:13 · answer #3 · answered by catzpaw 6 · 0 0

No difference. The term "aeroplane" was used during the early days (often referred to as the pioneer years) of aviation, as late as 1920s in some countries.

if you want too see actual examples of its usage check the following page in my website:

http://philippinephilatelist.org/Collections/USPI/airmail/1919/1926D.html

The word "aeroplane" is on the receiving postmark (top right image).

2006-10-02 21:33:18 · answer #4 · answered by ang-pogi-ko 3 · 0 0

Aeroplane-various winged vehicles capable of flight.
Aircraft . A machine or device, such as an airplane, helicopter, glider

2006-10-02 22:07:04 · answer #5 · answered by R S 4 · 0 0

aeroplane: an aircraft that has a fixed wing and is powered by propellers or jets

aircraft A machine or device, such as an airplane, helicopter, glider, or dirigible, that is capable of atmospheric flight.

2006-10-02 21:30:46 · answer #6 · answered by Feline Female 4 · 1 0

No difference

2006-10-04 02:48:37 · answer #7 · answered by divyang r 2 · 0 0

the spelling.....aeroplane is a aeroplane......aircraft is anything that can fly

2006-10-02 21:30:09 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no difference
whats the difference between Car and Motorcar

2006-10-02 21:27:24 · answer #9 · answered by A 3 · 0 0

one difference , thats spelling! dont mind plz may be my knowledge is less.

2006-10-02 21:27:16 · answer #10 · answered by styleguru_1986 2 · 0 0

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