When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: good directions weathervane

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Weather vane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_vane

    A modern scientific weathervane, gives the direction of the wind as an electrical signal. Another theory says that the cock was not a Christian symbol [12] but an emblem of the sun [13] derived from the Goths. [14] A few churches used weather vanes in the shape of the emblems of their patron saints. The City of London has two surviving examples.

  3. Wind direction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_direction

    Wind direction is generally reported by the direction from which the wind originates. For example, a north or northerly wind blows from the north to the south; [1] the exceptions are onshore winds (blowing onto the shore from the water) and offshore winds (blowing off the shore to the water).

  4. Curonian weathervane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curonian_weathervane

    The first weathervanes were made out of tin or wood, with oak or ash-tree traditionally used for the overall frame, and linden or willow for open-cut carvings. The size (114– 116 cm long without a flag and 40–45 cm height) and material of a weathervane has remained largely the same since then.

  5. World's largest weather vane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World's_largest_weather_vane

    Montague, Michigan, USA: Montague is home to the "World's Largest Working Weathervane" which was constructed in part by local manufacturer Whitehall Metal Studios. Originally located on a man-made peninsula that jutted out into the waters at the Northeast end of White Lake, it was moved to the corner of Dowling & Water Streets in Montague.

  6. Shem Drowne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shem_Drowne

    Faneuil Hall weathervane. Deacon Shem Drowne (December 4, 1683 – January 13, 1774) was a colonial coppersmith and tinplate worker in Boston, Massachusetts, and was America's first documented weathervane maker. He is most famous for the grasshopper weathervane atop of Faneuil Hall, well known as a symbol of Boston.

  7. Weathervane effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weathervane_effect

    Weathervaning or weathercocking [1] is a phenomenon experienced by aircraft on the ground and rotorcraft on the ground and when hovering.. Aircraft on the ground have a natural pivoting point on a plane through the main landing gear contact points [disregarding the effects of toe in/toe out of the main gear].