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  2. Rudder pedal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudder_pedal

    Green pedals in the floor of a Polikarpov I-15. A rudder pedal is a foot-operated aircraft flight control interface for controlling the rudder of an aircraft. [1] [2] The usual set-up in modern aircraft is that each pilot has a pedal set consisting of a pair of pedals, with one pedal for each foot. Each right and left pedal works together so ...

  3. Thrustmaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrustmaster

    Thrustmaster is an American designer, developer and manufacturer of joysticks, game controllers, and steering wheels for PCs and video gaming consoles. It has licensing agreements with third party brands as Airbus, Boeing, Ferrari, Gran Turismo and U.S. Air Force as well as licensing some products under Sony's PlayStation and Microsoft's Xbox licenses.

  4. Helicopter flight controls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helicopter_flight_controls

    The anti-torque pedals are located in the same place as the rudder pedals in an airplane, and serve a similar purpose—they control the direction that the nose of the aircraft points. Applying the pedal in a given direction changes the tail rotor blade pitch, increasing or reducing tail rotor thrust and making the nose yaw in the direction of ...

  5. NTSB probing ‘stuck’ control incident on Boeing 737 Max

    www.aol.com/ntsb-probing-stuck-control-incident...

    In a newly-released preliminary report of the February 6 incident, the National Transportation Safety board says the pilots of the Boeing 737 Max 8 “experienced ‘stuck’ rudder pedals during ...

  6. NTSB investigating 'stuck' rudder pedal issue on Boeing 737 ...

    www.aol.com/news/ntsb-investigating-stuck-rudder...

    The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating an United Airlines 737 MAX 8 flight last month that experienced "stuck" rudder pedals.

  7. Flight control surfaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_control_surfaces

    The rudder is a fundamental control surface which is typically controlled by pedals rather than at the stick. It is the primary means of controlling yaw—the rotation of an airplane about its vertical axis. The rudder may also be called upon to counter-act the adverse yaw produced by the roll-control surfaces.