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This article is about aircraft components. For other uses of "fairing", see Fairing (disambiguation). The wing root of a simple aircraft, an American Aviation AA-1 Yankee, showing a wing root fairing A fairing is a structure whose primary function is to produce a smooth outline and reduce drag.[1] These structures are generally light-weight shapes and covers for gaps and spaces between parts of an aircraft to reduce form drag and interference drag, and to improve appearance.[citation needed]
[edit] TypesOn aircraft, fairings are commonly found on:[citation needed]
British Airways Boeing 757-200 landing. The flap track fairings are the canoe-shaped fairings that protect and streamline the flap operating mechanisms. [edit] Flap track fairingsMost jet airliners have a cruising speed between Mach 0.8 and 0.85. For aircraft operating in the transonic regime (about Mach 0.8–1.2), wave drag can be minimized by having a cross-sectional area which changes smoothly along the length of the aircraft. This is known as the area rule. On subsonic aircraft such as jet airliners, this can be achieved by the addition of smooth pods on the trailing edges of the wings. These pods are known as anti-shock bodies, Küchemann Carrots, or flap track fairings, as they enclose the mechanisms for deploying the wing flaps.[2] [edit] See also[edit] References
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