MrJimi said:
After reading all these replies?
I would suggest all of you to get a real Pilots license and read your book very good
and go from there
This whole thing has been misrepresented to all of us big time
Jim
Oh Mr. Jimi, My USAF job was instrument flying instructor on a flight simulator, I have a pilots lisc, and before I got into computers, software and training I was a physicist, briefly, before I found that a BS in Physics qualified me to be an electronics technician to a PhD in physics.
The RIGHT answer is dependent on the problem statement and precise definition of terms. That is what made the topic so interesting as well as frustrating. Depending on the problem statement and definition of terms you can argue either way, take off or no take off AND BE RIGHT. The pity was that so many folks made their own (often unwarranted and unstated) assumptions and or were close minded and filed to explore any idea contrary to their preconceived notion.
Whether or not a real airplane will take off from a real conveyor belt was never in question and is trivially obvious to even the most casual observer with a modicum of experience or physical theory (with exception of the idiot pilot on Myth Busters) but that wasn't the problem stated here, WHETHER OR NOT SOME FOLKS NOTICED IT.
Again, depending on the definitions of terms and ignoring the current state of the art in building conveyors and airgraft wheels/tires/axles, you picks your definitions and you gets your answer. Either contention can be supported, depending on your assumptions.
Somehow I am reminded of a room full of folks in a marlinespike seamanship class I taught. At break time I sent half of the class out of the room and showed the remaining half how to tie a bowline knot. Then swapped class halves and showed the other half of the class a completely different way to do it. At the next break as students were practicing the knots they had been shown there were heated discussions just short of fights in some instances as many thought the other guy was just too wrong and had to be straightened out and shown the PROPER way to tie a bowline.
Pat