To the people that say the treadmill matches the speed of the plane so that the plane doesn't take off...how is this a possible scenario? If the plane is not moving with respect to the ground, neither is the treadmill. You understand this, right? So you must be talking about plane speed with respect to the treadmill, and the ground is irrelevant (no external frame of reference other than the air itself): this, my friend, is what is known as a runway, and the thought experiment fails.Let's say they both start at rest. Spin the prop, the plane moves forward and the treadmill instantaneously rolls backward equally. Either:1) The plane moves forward with respect to the ground, and the treadmill matches it in the opposite direction, acceleration and eventually flight occur2) The plane does not move with respect to the ground and the treadmill thusly stopsTHERE IS NO CASE FOR A POWERED PLANE STATIONARY WRT THE GROUND AND YET MOVING WRT THE TREADMILL. The only way this is possible is if you consider friction and the engine is used only to keep the plane steady as the treadmill rolls out from under it, but then this is no longer the same thought experiment.
1/31/2008 3:03:02 PM
1/31/2008 3:04:36 PM
That righthow do you define force then
1/31/2008 3:09:30 PM
1/31/2008 3:09:33 PM
1/31/2008 3:27:02 PM
1/31/2008 3:58:26 PM
you people need to get over the fact that it will not take off
1/31/2008 4:10:56 PM
I have a question for the people who think it takes off.Are you assuming that if the conveyor belt was running, the plane's wheels would spin but the plane would not move backward? if so, then I see why you say it will take off.They still didn't get the experiment right. The treadmill did not match the forward speed of the plane. If it had, the plane would not have moved forward. they ran the truck 25 mph but the plane obviously went over 25 or it wouldn't have moved forward to take off.
1/31/2008 4:12:50 PM
you are a complete idiot.THE PROBLEM SAYS THE PLANE WILL MOVE FORWARDIT DOES NOT SAY IT WILL STAY STILL
1/31/2008 4:13:44 PM
1/31/2008 4:14:47 PM
^^^^ troll^^^ supertroll[Edited on January 31, 2008 at 4:15 PM. Reason : damn]
1/31/2008 4:15:28 PM
OMG BUT (+)X + (-)X = 0!!
1/31/2008 4:15:58 PM
1/31/2008 4:56:35 PM
that's all correct and all, but I don't see the need in picking this simple thing apart, arbitrarily choosing where there will and wont be friction, adding moments and inertias and torques, etc. Getting more specific on this isn't going to help someone who doesn't understand the basic concept. unless you're just trying to sound smart...which we all do. you've succeeded!
1/31/2008 5:01:43 PM
Can someone re-post the initial setup and variables, because I for one got confused by misinterpreting the setup and different conditions much more than the actual science. Can someone re-post it?]
1/31/2008 5:06:07 PM
^^that's a post I made on another page where someone said if the bearings were frictionless, the plane wouldn't move.however, the post also explains why a treadmill can't prevent a plane from taking off when its engines are throttled to normal takeoff thrust. in order to stop the plane, the entire thrust has to accelerate the wheels. On a 747, there are 18 wheels of a few hundred pounds each totaling a few thousand pounds of wheel, versus thrust at takeoff, nearly 250,000 lbs.[Edited on January 31, 2008 at 5:07 PM. Reason : ]
1/31/2008 5:07:37 PM
the original wording is long lost i'm sure, but the concept is easy enough to reproduce:"You have a plane on a long conveyor belt; if the conveyor exactly matches the speed of the plane in the opposite direction, will it take off?"
1/31/2008 5:13:12 PM
this myth is fucking stupid if the plane is thought to move forward, because if its moving forward, that means it can accelerate faster than the treadmill can pull it back.basically the forces arent equal and thats the important thing. regardless of the speed the treamill and plane are making, the plane will move forward, which will eventually have lift and flybut the problem with the myth is ive heard different stories as to whether the plane is supposed to stay still because of the treamill or if it is allowed to make a forward movement in relation to the ground.SOMEONE, please find the myth and put it down as a quote.like actually say, this is the myth...........no deviation from it.
1/31/2008 6:00:32 PM
1/31/2008 6:07:31 PM
WHY YES, YES IT IS SIR
1/31/2008 6:10:14 PM
1/31/2008 6:12:15 PM
1/31/2008 6:15:31 PM
well hell, if the wheel bearings are assumed frictionless, then you can just put the plane on the treadmill w/o the engines running, turn on the treadmill and the plane will sit still with the wheels spinning because the only forces acting on it are gravity and the normal force.
1/31/2008 6:15:44 PM
if nothing else, this thread shows who understands physics and who does not lolplane will take off = understanding physicsplane will not take off = history majorhere is a lil thought experiment for you non-physics folks....with the plane engines off, assuming the brakes are not applied, start the conveyor belt....will the plane move along with the belt?consider 2 cases, starting the conveyor belt slowly vs. turning it up to 11 right awayi'll grade the answers later^hey, no answering before the question is asked[Edited on January 31, 2008 at 6:28 PM. Reason : .][Edited on January 31, 2008 at 6:29 PM. Reason : spellering]
1/31/2008 6:27:54 PM
I was trying to watch the end of it last night, but passed out. It was almost 2am.
1/31/2008 7:22:48 PM
Though I beleive some people are arguing for the hell of it.here is a picture with all the forces the plane is experiencingThe rotation of the wheels has no real effect on the plane body.So, there. There is no arguing this. I am an engineer like everyone else in here. so uh can we ask these people to take it on faith?
1/31/2008 7:26:35 PM
yes, i know it should fly in certain ideasso as far as the myth goes, i know why it worksi just didnt understand what the myth was trying to saythats why i questioned itits like those big swamp boats with the fan on the top.so even if the waves and current are pushing backwards really hard, the boat will still go forward because the fan doesnt not compete with the water, just the air
1/31/2008 7:31:26 PM
1/31/2008 8:38:14 PM
1/31/2008 8:53:56 PM
I believe that is all explained in detail with my picture[Edited on January 31, 2008 at 9:09 PM. Reason : dfg]
1/31/2008 9:08:47 PM
I wonder how this myth would hold up with a old russian k-5... it literally took off with a backwards velocity at the cherry point airshow a few years back with no treadmill.[Edited on January 31, 2008 at 9:11 PM. Reason : with no treadmill]
1/31/2008 9:10:53 PM
^^ your picture doesn't show shit. it doesn't even have the weight of the plane or the drag.
1/31/2008 9:21:43 PM
LimpyNuts is funny
1/31/2008 9:32:40 PM
1/31/2008 9:33:29 PM
You gotta zoom into the picture with the little magnifying glass tool in paint. You will see, because its science
1/31/2008 9:36:42 PM
if this was done in a perfect vacuum and not with wheels, but with a maglev, then yeah, it would kind of stay still.
1/31/2008 9:39:53 PM
1/31/2008 9:42:36 PM
1/31/2008 9:54:27 PM
no that is correct because it is a french made treadmill, and the coefficient of friction is non existent in france.
1/31/2008 10:04:44 PM
1/31/2008 10:32:17 PM
1/31/2008 11:22:23 PM
^^ god you're retarded. a wheel by itself moves because there is a NET FORCE applied to it. sitting a plane on top of that wheel does not change that fact no matter how the plane is attached.the net force is a result of viscosity in the air (both inside the tire and out) resisting rotation. the force is a function of the treadmill speed. even on a treadmill moving 100mph, the force would be on the order of 10's of pounds, but it exists. on frictionless bearings, the plane is guaranteed to move under the application of ANY force.Imagine the bearing is made of a zero-contact magnetic system. The axle floats inside the wheel because of like magnetic poles (this would create a nearly frictionless bearing (only friction due to air shear between surfaces). when the wheel tries to roll away because of the non-zero net force applied to it, it will move toward the axle, generating a non-zero magnetic force against the axle.Once again, the force is miniscule compared to the mass of the plane, but if you put a 747 with frictionless bearings on a treadmill going 100mph, I GUARANTEE, you'd be able to notice the movement.if i had the money for a shitload of really strong permanent magnets I'd demonstrate.[Edited on February 1, 2008 at 12:57 AM. Reason : i've clearly stated over and over that the treadmill can't stop the plane]
2/1/2008 12:56:47 AM
2/1/2008 1:26:01 AM
Haha.. I used to think it wouldn't take off. Then I realized exactly what was stated in that quote. Fun reading the arguments though.
2/1/2008 5:59:24 AM
^^^aww, don't get frusrated and resort to name calling think of it as me helping you be a better engineeryou almost have it right, but are missing why sitting the plane on the tire is a big effect, yet you include something about air viscositydo the simplest fluid dynamics calc you can think of for this and it sould become clear that the viscosity effect is ~0, so let's neglect that
2/1/2008 8:21:50 AM
^ I thought about it and LimpyNuts is right.If depends on the moment of inertia of the wheels. Different wheels have different moments of inertia. Not all of the force from the treadmill is transformed in to rotational energy, but most of it is (I think... some of it at least, i haven't ran any numbers,and it's very dependent on wheel design), but the rest is computed as a direct force on the center of mass of the wheel. So the wheels would be spinning pretty fast, but the plane/wheel is going to be moving forward a little bit.Seriously, look up the formulas for moments and torque and it'll make sense.
2/1/2008 9:22:16 AM
^ Yeah, it's not a steady state system so you can't just think of it as a a statics problem. But yeah if you examine an angularly accelerating wheel assuming no-slip you can look at moments about the center of the wheel and the moment about the non-slipping point of contact. You do that about 30 times in dynamics (if you expect to pass that is.) Of course, that force will be tiny compared to the thrust from the engines- obvious since the plane took off just fine.
2/1/2008 9:48:51 AM
I stated that the force is very small. The friction in the bearings acts on the wheel the same way the air viscosity does. It applies TORQUE to the wheel. It is the reaction force of the wheel against the treadmill that causes it to move laterally.My argument is simply that: if a plane with frictionless bearings sits on a treadmill and the treadmill is turned on, the plane will NOT sit still. The treadmill applies a net lateral force to the wheel therefore the wheel moves laterally unless you apply an equal and opposite force. The plane could weigh a trillion tons and it would still move unless the wheels had a ZERO moment of inertia (wheels can accelerate to treadmill speed with no applied force) AND ZERO surface area (air viscosity exerts 0 torque against wheel movement).
2/1/2008 12:39:46 PM
I will say again-Kari would get it. Confirmed. btw-this pic. on her discoverychannel.com profile is one of the better ones i've seen of her:\
2/1/2008 4:52:19 PM
^^
2/1/2008 6:37:01 PM