squiffy said:What about the thrust from the prop wash? Won't this give enough lift/over the control surfaces?![]()
Hypothetical Question
A plane is standing on a runway that can move like a giant conveyor belt. The plane applys full forward power and attempts to take off. This conveyer has a control system that tracks the plane's wheel speed and tunes the speed of the conveyer to be exactly the same but in the opposite direction, similar to a treadmill.
The question is:
Will the plane take off or not?
Telescopi said:No, it has no airspeed.
The belt is moving the plane backwards at the same speed the plane's thrust is trying to move it forward - hence no air speed.
xsnv @ overclockers.co.uk said:Lol...it's the whole "treadmill/freewheel/analogy with cars" thats confusing most people.
The function of the threadmill is to model a frictionless surface. Any rotation in the wheels is immediately counteracted by the treadmill. Thus the wheel cannot rotate relative to the treadmill (as it rotates with an equal but opposite velocity).
All that means is there is no friction between the wheels and the road.
So...to simplify things forget about the thread mill. Imagine the plane was on a very very very slippery sheet of ice. Also imagine that we did have a motor that could actually rotate the wheels of the plane (like a car)
Now we turn on the motor (to rotate the wheels). The plane doesn't move forward becasue i't just slips (much like a car in mud). We're stuck.
Now imagine superman came along and blew an almighty gust of wind at the plan from behind. Would the plane move?
Make it easier....imagein you had a very light toy car on very slippery ice(no engine in the toy car so it can't genrate it's own motion) If you blew it would it move forward?
Telescopi said:The belt is moving the plane backwards at the same speed the plane's thrust is trying to move it forward

My God thats one late running plane, it's still on the runway 

Scuzi said:Yes it will take off. Thrust is not applied through the wheels. The engines provide thrust against the airmass and the plane will accelerate relative to the airmass. When the airspeed over the wing is sufficient, regardless of what speed the wheels are travelling at, enough lift will be produced to lift the aircraft from the ground.
The wheels just freewheel, there's no drive through them. I can't believe how many people argue this case, it's plainly obvious that it will take off.
Any argument otherwise is wrong![]()

they must be dog owners tbhtim_enchanter said:Yep he was of course correct, the thing is people still can't believe it![]()

It definitely disappeared, I couldn't think why it got deleted.blighter said:what happened to this thread?it disappeared for a few days
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Scuzi said:Christ, I thought I'd seen the last of this! No such luck![]()
fornowagain said:It definitely disappeared, I couldn't think why it got deleted.
I meant why delete the thread? Why not edit his link? Just wondered if there was a technical reason why it vanished, not even the usual Dons place holder saying why. I was curious if there's like a non public store for "to be see to" threads or something.tim_enchanter said:lol Just when you thought you'd seen the last of it, there it is again
Because the OP was a naughty boy and linked to a page with lots of swearing, his post was sanitised and the thread reinstated