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"The results have been manipulated on so many levels, " party spokesman Yaw Buaben Asamoa said.
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But Kotoko chief executive Major Yaw Larsen told BBC Sport he was not in favour of postponing the match.
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In a sharp corner, it can toe out the rear outside wheel, increasing yaw rate and helping to neutralize understeer.
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One reason for the tall, vertical tail on an airliner is to allow the pilot to compensate with the rudder for the yaw created when a wing-mounted engine fails.
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Investigators say the weight, wind factors, an ineffective pilot maneuver in response to an onboard alarm and a subsequent surprise yaw caused the aircraft to spin out of control.
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Better yet, this shooter features optical image stabilization ( OIS) just like the Lumia 920 -- it's able to compensate for motion in 2 axes (pitch and yaw) up to 2, 000 times per second.
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Mounting the engines at the back (a design popularised in the 1950s by Sud Aviation's Caravelle, but subsequently abandoned on large aircraft) means that yaw is much reduced, and with it the need for a large tail.
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The control surfaces, acting independently or together with a variable angle of attack of up to 20 degrees (front) and 40 degrees (rear), move the car's center of aerodynamic balance around to compensate for the forces of pitch, roll, yaw and high-speed lift.
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The joints in its fingers, thumb and wrist provide 24 degrees of freedom (a degree of freedom is the ability of one part of a system to move independently of the others in a particular way, as a ship may yaw, pitch or roll).
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The Demon system's success in controlling roll, one of the three axes of movement of a body in free space, is also leading engineers to wonder if the other two axes, pitch and yaw, might similarly be transferred to fluidic systems from, respectively, the elevator flaps on the tailplane and the rudder on the tail.
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