it can happen
1/27/2008 10:30:34 PM
1/27/2008 10:38:52 PM
Planes are not propelled forward by the wheels. They are propelled by the engines, which will be entirely unaffected by the treadmill's movement if the wheels spin freely. If you think the plane does not take off, you either do not understand basic physics or you do not understand the scenario as it is presented.
1/27/2008 11:19:39 PM
it takes off.
1/27/2008 11:21:35 PM
It will take off. I used to think it wouldn't, but after watching that video, and thinking about it more it will take off. Imagine it this way....You have a friend wearing rollerskates and he is standing on one of the moving sidewalks. You are standing to the side on stationary ground. You have your hand against his back and the moving sidewalk is going 5mph. Right now he is not going anywhere. He is staying in one spot and the wheels of the skates are rotating. If you walk forward pushing him with your hand, he is going to move forward also. Imagine at this time you are the jet engines. If the sidewalk increases to 15mph you are still going to be able to move him forward with the same amount of energy and you are also free to push him as fast as you want no matter if the moving sidewalk was even going 100mph.Does this make more sense to those who think the plane will not take off?
1/27/2008 11:31:12 PM
^This assumes a frictionless environment, but considering rolling friction is negligible in this situation, that is a very good analogy. Hopefully people will be convinced.
1/27/2008 11:33:38 PM
^^ i thought the myth was that a plane on a belt, without the engines on, would take off. Many people believe this to be true. They think somehow that the plane taking off is related to the movement of the ground underneath it, which of course is not true. It's related to the movement of the air around the wings. If the myth is that a plane on a belt fires up its jets and attempts to take off, obviously that is true. The wheels on the plane are just there basically so the belly of the plane is not sitting on the ground, but the rotation of the wheels relative to the ground have nothing to do with the plane taking flight.
1/27/2008 11:56:06 PM
ok...let's break this one downplane on a belt, without the engines on, would take offplane...without engines on, would take offyeah, that's true
1/27/2008 11:58:14 PM
yeah, exactly. I don't think this is really a good myth for "MythBusters". This myth, unlike many of the ones they do, has an extremely simple scientific and physical explanation. If people do not understand the principles involved, that's their problem. Performing an experiment in this case will do nothing for proving or disproving the myth. All they need to do is bring on an aerospace engineer to explain how planes fly. It's not like they're going to put a plane on a belt (without the engines one) and all of the sudden it starts floating and Jamie and Adam are like "wtf, we just rewrote the laws of physics"
1/28/2008 12:01:32 AM
yeah, i think it will be good to illustrate the myth properlyi asked my friend who is in aerospace and he said the plane wouldn't take off
1/28/2008 12:04:29 AM
treadmill is basically negligable impact and irreleventmy offer still stands to place bets against anyone who thinks it won't take off. I'll bet $50, $500, or $5000...whatever you want. It will take off, and I will take your money. Let me know if you're interested in taking this bet, and we'll try to make some arrangements.
1/28/2008 12:06:57 AM
this guy makes an important pointhttp://www.straightdope.com/columns/060203.htmlthe wording of the question makes a big difference. If the riddle/question is worded like this:"The conveyer belt is designed to exactly match the speed of the wheels at any given time, moving in the opposite direction of rotation."then that's a paradoxical question. If you have thrust from the plane's jets, that statement can never be true.
1/28/2008 12:21:24 AM
http://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=499574There are tons of videos in this thread of PLANES PHYSICALLY MOVING FORWARD ON A TREADMILL.And yes, tons of pilots say it will take off.I myself am an aerospace engineer for the NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION. It will take off. Everyone keeps saying "It won't take off, no air is moving over the wings". Why do you say no air is moving over the wings?
1/28/2008 12:22:20 AM
1/28/2008 12:26:51 AM
1/28/2008 1:06:52 AM
...why does anybody give a shit?
1/28/2008 1:08:56 AM
1/28/2008 1:13:04 AM
1/28/2008 2:02:08 AM
1/28/2008 3:06:09 AM
1/28/2008 3:18:10 AM
^He's saying that in the A = A+5 paradox (more accurately, A=2*A), A is the speed of the treadmill, not the speed of the wheels... turns out a lot people seem to misinterpreit this myth and the laws of physics such that they believe that the treadmill's speed will continuously double to compensate for the fact that the wheel's speed is twice that of the treadmill, and that the speed will increase infinitely to keep the plane from taking off.Yes, it's stupid. But people think it.
1/28/2008 3:50:59 AM
I will not be convinced unless they use a real plane with a really big treadmill.
1/28/2008 4:08:28 AM
after watching the trailer for the show, it looks like the tarp will tear where it is attached to the pickup truck.
1/28/2008 6:15:08 AM
They should put this question on the FE.
1/28/2008 7:50:27 AM
I bet the guy who originally unleashed this scourge upon the Earth beats off every night thinking about how he mind-fucked so many people at the same time.
1/28/2008 8:43:34 AM
it still blows my mind that anyone with enough intelligence to post on the internet still thinks that, conceptually, the plane wouldn't take offand how intelligent do you really have to be to post on the internetmy point exactly
1/28/2008 9:44:27 AM
1/28/2008 9:45:11 AM
1/28/2008 9:50:09 AM
at this point I'm assuming anyone that says it won't take off is a troll
1/28/2008 9:53:02 AM
i think you'd be giving them too much credit.
1/28/2008 10:02:31 AM
Lol@people thinking that engines cause planes to take off.Thats why when you hit 88 mph on the highway, your car takes flight and goes back in time to save a hot Teacher...right..RIGHT?
1/28/2008 10:07:07 AM
The myth as i understand it is that the treadmill is providing the same force on the wheels in one direction as the jet/prop provides force in the other direction.If you want to see what happens go grab a toy car or train or a pair of roller skates. Put the skates on a treadmill going whatever speed and then put your hand on the back of the car/train/skates so that it stays still on the treadmill relative to yourself.The force you are exerting on the car/train/skate works the same as the force of the jet/propeller on the plane. Friction of the belt on the wheels forces the plane/car/train/skate backwards. Your hand/jet/propeller is an opposing force in the opposite direction. if the plane does not move relative to the ground/air it wont take off.
1/28/2008 10:11:23 AM
1/28/2008 10:16:20 AM
1/28/2008 10:20:43 AM
No that clearly isn't the myth as nobody is going to build a treadmill the length of an runway.And no, the length of a treadmill isn't long enough to provide lift.[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:23 AM. Reason : >.<]
1/28/2008 10:22:54 AM
^^yea but thats not the mythThe myth is that the treadmill is generating the same force as the engines in opposing directions.If i have a plane on a treadmill and the treadmill is doing 5mph against me and i throttle up to mach2 of course im going to take off. That would be a fucking stupid myth.[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:25 AM. Reason : .]
1/28/2008 10:23:45 AM
ok, well whatever the "real myth" is is irrelevant. The whole thing is a thought experiment anyway, and if the question is framed properly, there are definitively correct and incorrect answers to it.
1/28/2008 10:24:27 AM
1/28/2008 10:42:09 AM
1/28/2008 10:50:15 AM
If I were I a high school physics teacher, I would put this on a test.btw on that scaled test they were doing... I really don't think that treadmill they put it on is long enough for the plane to take off.[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 11:20 AM. Reason : ]
1/28/2008 11:11:04 AM
1/28/2008 11:28:04 AM
I seem to notice that everyone who says "It won't take off" either don't leave a valid explanation or don't respond when people refute their flawed logic.
1/28/2008 11:29:40 AM
i am not an engineer, i do not have a degree, i may one day finish my degree in business management... if it becomes financially smart homehow.i like mythbusters, and i DVR it, and i'm sure i'll be watching this at some point this week. with the amount of dickbag know-it-alls on the internet, COMBINED with the fact that they love going above and beyond life-sized with their "mythbusting" then all i can comment on with certainty is that its gonna be big. and that no matter what there will still be unemployed know-it-alls saying that this and that were done wrongbut if i had to answer based ONLY on the opinions of people here. its lifting off. cause i'm a lot more inclined these days to go off credentials and life experience. if the guy that got in at nasa and all his friends say its going to go, and the guy who flies jets for a living says its gonna go, then its in my best interest to believe them. cause if they're the stupid ones, then i'm never flying again
1/28/2008 11:40:41 AM
1/28/2008 11:50:59 AM
1/28/2008 11:51:31 AM
1/28/2008 11:56:50 AM
im just gonna argue that if you cant figure out the quote thing on tww then you probably shouldnt be in this debate[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 12:04 PM. Reason : i skip words]
1/28/2008 12:03:58 PM
^^yes but with that force you'd overcome the treadmill easily and start moving.[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 12:04 PM. Reason : .]
1/28/2008 12:04:16 PM
There is air going over the wings though. The plane is still moving forward. Say the treadmill had oil all over it and was completely frictionless. When it starts moving backwards, it is frictionless, so the plane stays still, right? So now the engines power up and the only force acting on the plane is the engines. If you take out the oil, it is the exact same situation because (in an ideal situation) you neglect the friction between the wheels and the treadmill.
1/28/2008 12:09:36 PM
Holy crap i cant believe people are still debating about this.People are now to the point of arguing about the wording of the question, because it can be phrased incorrectly.If i put you on roller skates, and strap a rocket to your ass, then put you on a treadmill, will you move forward?Yes, you will (assuming the rocket is powerful enough to overcome the friction in the wheel bearings on the roller skates + some).Same principle.
1/28/2008 12:09:41 PM