Aviation Maintenance Terms beginning with N
Nailing strip
A method of applying pressure to the glue in a scarf joint repair in a plywood skin. A strip of thin plywood is nailed over the glued scarf joint with the nails extending into a supporting structure beneath the skin. The strip is installed over vinyl sheeting to prevent it sticking to the skin. When the glue is thoroughly dry, the nailing strip is broken away and the nails removed.
Nap of the fabric
The ends of the fibers in a fabric. The first coat of dope on cotton or linen fabric raises the nap, and the fiber ends stick up. These ends must be carefully removed by sanding to get a smooth finish.
Naphtha
A volatile and flammable hydrocarbon liquid used chiefly as a solvent or as a cleaning fluid.
Negative pressure relief valve (pressurization component)
A valve that opens anytime the outside air pressure is greater than the cabin pressure. It prevents the cabin altitude from ever becoming greater than the aircraft flight altitude.
Neutral axis (neutral plane)
A line through a piece of material that is bent. The material in the outside of the bend is stretched and that on the inside of the bend is shrunk. The material along the neutral plane is neither shrunk nor stretched.
Neutral flame
An oxyacetylene flame produced when the ratio of oxygen and acetylene is chemically correct and there is no excess of oxygen or carbon. A neutral flame has a rounded inner cone and no feather around it.
Noise (electrical)
An unwanted electrical signal within a piece of electronic equipment.
Nomex
A patented nylon material used to make the honeycomb core for certain types of sandwich materials.
Nonenergizing brake
A brake that does not use the momentum of the aircraft to increase the friction.
Nonvolatile memory
Memory in a computer that is not lost when power to the computer is lost.
Normal heptane
A hydrocarbon, C7H16, with a very low critical pressure and temperature. Normal heptane is used as the low reference in measuring the anti-detonation characteristics of a fuel.
Normal shock wave
A shock wave that forms ahead of a blunt object moving through the air at the speed of sound. The shock wave is normal (perpendicular) to the air approaching the object. Air passing through a normal shock wave is slowed to a subsonic speed and its static pressure is increased.
Normalizing
Aprocess of strain-relieving steel that has been welded and left in a strained condition. The steel is heated to a specified temperature, usually red hot, and allowed to cool in still air to room temperature.
Nose-gear centering cam
A cam in the nose-gear shock strut that causes the piston to center when the strut fully extends. When the aircraft takes off and the strut extends, the wheel is straightened in its fore-and-aft position so it can be retracted into the wheel well.
Null position
The position of an ADF loop antenna when the signal being received is canceled in the two sides of the loop and the signal strength is the weakest.
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