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  2. Basic fighter maneuvers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_fighter_maneuvers

    Turn circle geometry. Even though depicted as flying at the same turn rate and turn radius, closure occurs during lead pursuit and then reverses during lag pursuit, with the greatest nose/tail separation at the moment the attacker pulls lead. Once an attacker gets behind a defender, there are three problems to solve in order to prosecute the kill.

  3. Herbst maneuver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbst_maneuver

    The Herbst maneuver (also known as a J-turn [1] [2]) is an air combat maneuver that uses post-stall technology such as thrust vectoring and advanced flight controls to achieve high angles of attack. [3] The Herbst maneuver allows an aircraft to quickly reverse direction using a combination of high angle-of-attack and rolling.

  4. Man overboard rescue turn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_overboard_rescue_turn

    A man overboard rescue turn (or person overboard) [1] is a shiphandling manoeuvre usually implemented immediately upon learning of a person having gone overboard into the sea. To bring a vessel closer to the person's location, implementations of the principles described are: the Anderson turn (or single turn), the quick turn (also known as the ...

  5. Stall turn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stall_turn

    The aircraft begins at the dot, and pulls into a vertical climb. The small angled line at the top indicates a stall turn (without indicating the orientation after the turn). The plane then descends, pulls into horizontal flight, and ends at the small vertical line. The hammerhead turn, stall turn, or Fieseler is an aerobatics turn-around maneuver.

  6. Standard rate turn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_rate_turn

    A standard rate turn is defined as a 3° per second turn, which completes a 360° turn in 2 minutes. This is known as a 2-minute turn, or rate one (180°/min). Fast airplanes, or aircraft on certain precision approaches, use a half standard rate ('rate half' in some countries), but the definition of standard rate does not change.

  7. Aircraft compass turns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_compass_turns

    Standard rate turn is a standardized rate at which the aircraft will make a 360 degree turn in two minutes (120 seconds). Standard rate turn is indicated on turn coordinator or turn-slip indicator. All turns during flights under instrument rules shall be made at standard turn rate, but no more than 30 degrees of bank.

  8. Turnaround management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnaround_management

    The repositioning strategy, also known as "entrepreneurial strategy", attempts to generate revenue with new innovations and change in product portfolio and market position. This includes developing new products, entering new markets, exploring alternative sources of revenue and modifying the image or the mission of a company.

  9. Repositioning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repositioning

    Drug repositioning, the application of known drugs to treat new diseases; Equity repositioning, a diversifying financial strategy; Repositioning cruise, a cruise in which the embarkation and the disembarkation ports are different; Repositioning maneuver, an epley maneuver used to treat benign paroxysmal positional vertigo