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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a camber" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts related to engineering, automotive design, or architecture, referring to a slight convexity or curvature in a surface.
Example: "The engineer specified a camber for the road to ensure proper drainage and improve vehicle handling."
Alternatives: "a curvature" or "a slope".
Exact(9)
Skis are built with a camber, or a slight arch, so as to distribute the skier's weight along the length of the ski.
For decades, almost all boards had a camber, or curve: if you looked at the board from the side, it was convex, rising to an arc in the middle and then pointing up again at the tips.
The Romans were undoubtedly better road engineers; in the torrential rain earlier this summer, their broad north-south road, built with a camber and drainage ditches, stayed dry, while the Iron Age road turned into a swampy river.
"You have to be quite gentle, especially in Sochi because there is a bit of a camber so even though you think you can see what is going on you also have to feel through your body".
As the airstream flow increases its temperature, the strips recover the memorized bent shape, leading to a camber variation.
Slotted Flap As shown in Figure 3(3), a flap increase a camber angle and make a space said as slot between main part of the airfoil and the flap.
Similar(51)
A cambered outfield of short-trimmed grass meant boundaries were there to be had and after holding firm against the spinner initially, Buttler was able to get a couple away off the seamer Umesh Yadav.
A cambered elastomeric seal used in a novel universal joint for reciprocating circular motion is investigated.
It has been theorized that the curved streamlines of the flow impart a virtual camber and incidence on them, giving a performance analogous to a cambered blade in a rectilinear flow.
Most yacht sails are made of thin fabric, and they have a cambered shape to generate lift force; however, their shape can be easily deformed by wind pressure.
The better lift of a cambered surface compared to a flat one was first discussed scientifically by Sir George Cayley.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com