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cruising radius

American  

noun

  1. the maximum distance that an aircraft or ship can traverse and then return to its starting point at cruising speed without refueling.


Etymology

Origin of cruising radius

First recorded in 1925–30

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The result was a superb instrument of war�with long cruising radius and many-bomb capacity.

From Time Magazine Archive

We are not so well provided with bases, and so we must have larger ships of longer cruising radius.

From Time Magazine Archive

Since 1926 U. S. naval policy has favored the big cruiser, on the theory that the U. S., lacking naval bases, needed fighters with the maximum offensive cruising radius.

From Time Magazine Archive

He also bought the Krupp-built Vanados, then largest yacht afloat, with a cruising radius of 12,000 mi., renamed her Warrior and refitted her for his own oceanographic and pleasure purposes.

From Time Magazine Archive

The 72-footers develop a speed of twenty-eight knots and have a cruising radius exceeding 1200 miles.

From Kelly Miller's History of the World War for Human Rights by Miller, Kelly