Iowachild said:If I understand what is being said, it's like a person running on a treadmill.
rback33 said:OK, now what is your explanation for this? I mean, we are defying SOOOO many physical possibilities already, what makes it IMPOSSIBLE for a prop plane of any imaginary composition to do this? Now, don't get me wrong, I don't know if there is or isn't. My degree is in biology. I just love science a whole so this discussion is fascinating to me.![]()
The plane has no forward motion!755inNY said:It is not like a person running on a treadmill because the plane's forward motion is not accomplished by a rotational force of the wheels against the surface of the movable runway. If it were a car on a movable road then it would be like a person running on a treadmill. But then it would not be the movable road matching the speed of the car but rather the rotational speed of the wheels. The only time the movable road and car would be at the same speed would be when the speed was zero.
Jeff
hutch4472 said:I dont know why but it's baffleing to me that people think the plane would fly. The plane isnt moving. It is using all of its applied power, to overcome the conveyour's movement, to stay in one place. It NEEDS air flow over the wings in an amount that no prop nor jet can provide alone. The engines just provide forward movement to move air over the wings and control surfaces via airspeed.
755inNY said:Boy, I'm getting deeper into this than I thought I would. Those who feel the plane would not be moving are still thinking in terms of the wheels driving the plane forward. This is not what happens.
I am a pilot, I know what moves the plane forward!
Let's use the example of the treadmill from Iowachild.
You are standing on one end of a long treadmill. You are holding on a cable coming from a winch at the far end of the treadmill (let's assume the cable has no weight so we don't have to worry about sag and stuff). For now, the treadmill is stationary but the cable is pulling at 3 mph. If you don't want friction burns from being dragged on the stationary belt, you will be walking at 3 mph. The cable keeps pulling you until you get to the other end of the treadmill.
Get on a treadmill, don't move your feet, than start the treadmill. What happened?
OK, reset back to the other end of the treadmill. I flip the lever coupling the motor that drives the winch to also drive the treadmill. Gearing is such that the treadmill runs at exactly the same linear speed as the winch but in the opposite direction. Again, your goal is to not be dragged so you must start walking but this time to keep up with the 3 mph pull of the cable your legs must run at a 6 mph pace to keep perfect balance. You will get to the end of the treadmill in the same time as the previous run but a little more winded.
Now substitute the movable runway for the treadmill, the plane for your body, the propeller for the cable and the wheels for your legs. Why won't the plane move?
Put a toy airplane on the treadmill, start it up. What happens to the toy plane? Now tie a string to the toy plane and just hold it, don't pull it just hold it. Now what happens?
The propeller does not care what is happening between the wheels and the runway. It is pulling against the air (assuming a tractor configuration). Finally, I got tractor into the discussion!!!!
Jeff
Iowachild I am a pilot said:Then you should know that using feet against a treadmill is not a good comparison for what moves a plane through the air. I am a pilot too.
I think we gotta find ourselves a moving runway.
Jeff
Of course it is, it's still because of friction. A propellor pulls an airplane through the air the same way threads pull a screw into wood. If this conveyor belt is moving backwards at 60 mph, friction between the belt and the tires of the plane will move the plane backwards at 60 mph. It will take the same thrust to keep the plane from moving backwards as it would take to move the air plane forward at 60 mph on a non-moving runway. To move forward the thrust would have to increase beyond that point. What's your ground speed when your indicated airspeed is 120 mph and you are into a 60 mph headwind. How about your ground speed with the same ISA of 120 mph and a tailwind of 60 mph?755inNY said:Then you should know that using feet against a treadmill is not a good comparison for what moves a plane through the air. I am a pilot too.
I think we gotta find ourselves a moving runway.
Jeff