Originally posted by john9001
it talks about the belt counteracting the speed of the plane,
No, it says match not counteract. Match means it moves with the same speed (same direction or opposite depending on your interpretation). A cop chasing you matches your speed, he does not counteract it. A passing cop driving with the same speed as you are is not not "counteracting" your speed either)
It is impossible for the belt to counteract (negate) the movement of the plane. To do that, the belt would have to be able to exert a force (on the plane) equal to the thrust. This is not possible because of two friction couplings. No matter how much force the best applies to the wheel only a portion of it (defined by the weakest friction link) it transfered to the plane.
With the brakes applied, the wheel/belt friction defines the force on the plane. With no brakes, the wheel/axle friction is the deciding factor.
Even if the belt's "logic" is to drive the belt not "to match", but "to negate" the airplane's speed, it can't accomplish that. A small portion of the force will transfer to the plane (insufficient to counteract the thrust), the rest will start spinning the wheels, but no inherent infinities here. The belt is defining the speed, and the belt (not the plane) provides the energy necessary to accelerate the rotation of the wheel. There is no "race" between the wheel and the belt which according to Eskimo and Hitech will generate infinite speeds in infinitely short time. The belt is active, the wheel is passive.
From the plane's perspective it does not matter. Spinning wheel does not affect translation. As long as the rotation axis does not rotate itself (as it would if the plane would try to turn, or if you apply ailerons titling the plane), the plane moves forward just fine. As a matter of fact the wheels act as gyroscopes steading plane's movement forward.