Cast alar


"Embedded" redirects here. For other meanings, see assembly. Fairing with fairing in a light aircraft American Aviation AA-1 Yankee.

The alar wing, or wing root, is the wing part of a fixed wing aircraft that is closest to the fuselage.In a simple monoplane configuration, the wing root is usually easy to identify. In an airplane with a parasol wing or with some types of multiple tail, the wing may not have a clear root area.The end of the wing opposite the root is the wing tip.

The socket is the area where the wing meets the fuselage. It is therefore a zone of transmission of high stresses between the wing and the fuselage itself, in particular, transmits efforts caused by the lift of the aircraft, which results in a high bending moment in that area.

It is one of the most critical areas in aircraft design and its resistance must be tested before the aircraft can be sold for commercial use.

Not all airplanes are embedded, only those airplanes that have separate wing and fuselage components, the wing structure does not have this differentiated part (although the efforts due to lift are still important and are also concentrated in their middle zone, but it's not a proper fitting).

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