Board Thread:Off Topic/@comment-27144409-20160125035940/@comment-27144409-20170710212333

Not to my knowledge, and I'm rather well versed in aircraft. Aside from the term "hydroplaning", which refers to when a vehicle, such as a car, skids uncontrollably over a wet surface. Otherwise it refers to aquatic vehicles and components.

WWI tech it is then. RT actually did a real life demo of the interuptor tech used by WWI biplanes to avoid shooting off their propellers. It was largely out of style by WWII. They went to using the wings.