Since Kurt renegged on his finality, I, too, shall take a final final parting shot.
Originally posted by rabbidrabbit
...Even if it was a super duper treadmill going super duper fast, do you think that you would not be able to pull yourself forward?
I requote the original post:
Originally posted by rabbidrabbit
A plane is standing on a runway that can move like a giant conveyor belt. The plane applies full forward power and attempts to take off. This conveyor has a control system that tracks the plane's wheel speed and tunes the speed of the conveyor to be exactly the same but in the opposite direction, similar to a treadmill.
The question is:
Will the plane take off or not?
No mention about allowing or disallowing differentiations in rapid acceleration.. wheel speed will be matched.. period.
By that definition, a wheel can NEVER roll out of the matching mechanism and can NEVER move forward.
That is the basis of my entire argument. I'm not arguing if the physics are in place that would allow such a device to exist. That is not the question placed. The question is that if the rotation of the wheels have no ability to move the aircraft forward in relation to the rest of the world that isn't on this treadmill thingy or whatever it turns out to be, can the plane attain enough airspeed to take off. No winches, no catapults, no fingers, no paper.. Airplane, its engine, its gear.
My answer is still 'No' based on these assumptions of the argument.
And with the previously mentioned caveats ( which seems like an eternity ago ) that there is no significant head-wind and the aircraft in question does not have the inherent capability of creating enough lift with its engine to launch without a runway. I'm thinking in terms of the F16, which I understand to have a thrust to weight ratio greater than 1:1, so, theoretically, it should be able to launch straight up. At least that's what they told us 20+ years ago..
I don't 'do' jets. My observations are based on propeller driven craft.
Ok. I'm really done this time.