Beernoulli wrt to wings (as opposed to pipes) never made sense to me, becasue it kind of means that the air over the top has to have some prior knowledge of how much it has to speed up to keep pace with the air over the bottom, but wth, who cares as long as it works.
Anyway,
Did you know.....
The word
hangar comes from the French but probably not a guy called Hangar who stored his blimps in one as is sometimes thought. More likely to be from the Latin word
angarium which was a shed where horses got shod, in turn from the word
ungulus for hoof. Amazing the cr@p you can find on the 'net
Edit... did I really say
Beernoulli... must have fluids on the mind.