11/19/2007 9:39:27 AM
^^ there is negligible resistance to motion by the wheelsand once again, A TREADMILL IS IRRELEVANT TO PLANES[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 9:40 AM. Reason : ]
11/19/2007 9:39:42 AM
now its an official page 5.page 4 is not officials.official stamp---\/[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 9:44 AM. Reason : ]
11/19/2007 9:44:05 AM
^ haha shit is funnier each time i read it
11/19/2007 9:46:05 AM
I see the .gif of the kid with the wheels. The problem is she is not on a treadmill so it is worthless.
11/19/2007 10:15:07 AM
because that matters and all
11/19/2007 10:16:42 AM
the treadmill seems very important to this plane problem
11/19/2007 10:19:11 AM
the Heelys pic is just for funDo you think the plane will take off faster with the treadmill going in the same direction? Because it won't. Basically, treat it like the plane is on a frictionless surface with likewise zero friction in its wheels and wheel bearings[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 10:52 AM. Reason : ]
11/19/2007 10:51:54 AM
yeah, without friction, the conveyor does nothing.. and since the plane has wheels, there is not enough friction to matter.. thus, ignore the conveyor, plane takes off, stfu
11/19/2007 10:53:44 AM
How did this thread reach 5 pages?The plane does not take off./thread
11/19/2007 12:04:27 PM
troll
11/19/2007 12:05:02 PM
Ah. I see.
11/19/2007 12:07:39 PM
my pick of best tww threadsdont know if the damn thing takes of or not but it sure is funny that ppl are still fighting bout it
11/19/2007 12:13:14 PM
Hahaha this thread causes so many carl faces.First of all:
11/19/2007 12:26:58 PM
^ I thought the myth specified that the treadmill will move at the same speed as the wheels.When on the ground, the plane will not move unless the wheels can create net horiz. distance. If the treadmill constantly adjusts, how will the plane move?
11/19/2007 12:30:07 PM
I think I finally understand what you "The plane will take off" guys are talking about. And let me just say, you are wrong (I am sure that you will correct me if I am wrong ).You are saying that the engines are propelling the plane on the treadmill. The wheels are merely a medium to slide accross the ground and have nothing to with the actual movement of the plane. Therefore, with the engines pushing, the plane will move forward as normal, the wheels will spin twice as fast in the opposite direction, and the plane will take off as planned. Do I understand you correctly?If so, then you are wrong. The problem is that the myth implies that the plane is not actually moving because it is on a treadmill (hence why the treadmill is involved). You keep saying that the treadmill doesn't matter, but it is the KEY part of this myth. I suppose it is more of a question if a plane can "accelerate" is one place then start ascending without actually moving anywhere.If you can get into a position where the plane is "working" on the treadmill but not actually moving anywhere, as the original premise of the myth dictates, then the plane will not take off. Seems pretty obvious to me. It is not moving with respect to the air around it, and therefore cannot fly.If we are to assume that the treadmill doesn't actually matter and the plane will move forward as planned, then the entire premise of this myth is null because it can never happen. It WILL NOT take off because this is an invalid scenario. So, for those of you saying it will take off, you are still wrong.Thanks for playing. Let me know if I messed up any of your logic for how you expect this myth to occur.[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 12:38 PM. Reason : .]
11/19/2007 12:36:55 PM
^ Correct.
11/19/2007 12:37:43 PM
Of course MythBusters will probably screw this up as usual by not putting their model on a variable speed treadmill.I remember once they were baffled because a steel cable rated at 5,000 pounds kept snapping when tied to a car traveling double digit mph. "But the car only weighs 3,000 pounds, so we don't know why the cable is snapping." I hate that show.[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 12:43 PM. Reason : ]
11/19/2007 12:43:12 PM
How is the treadmill stopping the plane from moving?
11/19/2007 2:19:03 PM
Wow... I cant believe people are still arguing it wouldnt take off
11/19/2007 2:49:07 PM
11/19/2007 2:51:32 PM
It would be funny to reverse the treadmill right as the plane is trying to take off and watch it sling it off the runway.
11/19/2007 3:03:00 PM
^ Huh? that wouldn't happen either.
11/19/2007 3:05:08 PM
11/19/2007 3:08:05 PM
11/19/2007 3:11:33 PM
planes don't "work" on the ground.... cars do
11/19/2007 3:13:58 PM
Do you guys really not get it that treadmill does nothing to change the planes velocity in relation to air speed? That is all the matters here, the plane will absolutely take off and I can't tell if you guys are just trolling or if you seriously think it won't. The plane is still going to move down the runway no matter how fast the ground is moving. The air is not connected to the ground and the plane's speed relative to the air it is going through will still be high enough for the plane to take off, period.
11/19/2007 3:15:14 PM
This thread is funny.Lets say they set up the treadmill to run 10 mph.The plane is on the treadmill as they turn it on. The wheels of the plane start turning at 10 mph but the plane isnt moving.Lets assume the plane needs 100 mph to take-off.The plane starts to accelerate it's engines and begins to move forward. The propulsion of the plane is against the air around it, not the ground so every mph the plane accelerates the wheels are turning 10 mph faster.Right before takeoff, the plane's wheels are turning 110 mph due to the treadmill, but the plane is only moving 100 mph.Then it takes off.The End!BTW: The treadmill will have to be as long as a runway, or atleast long enough for whatever type of plane they use to takeoff.[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 3:19 PM. Reason : mo]
11/19/2007 3:16:36 PM
^^ yeah, that's what i was thinking about how they would do it[Edited on November 19, 2007 at 3:17 PM. Reason : 3]
11/19/2007 3:17:01 PM
...I think I finally understand.Yeah, it would take off.For those still thinking it wouldn't: if you had a constant wind blowing against the plane at a speed equal that which would be produced by the engines, it would still take off, but to a ground observer it would appear to have no horizontal motion...and that would be a freakin' sight...
11/19/2007 3:26:02 PM
It's pretty simple you just have to consider where the forward movement is being generated. If it were a car or a bike or a person on the treadmill then yes they would stand still. The wheels are simply there to turn and cancel out most of the friction as the engines provide the movement speed. The people who claim it wont take off are assuming that the forward speed of the plane is being driven by the wheels in which case they would be correct, last i checked though if that were the case as soon as the plane came off the groud its forward movement would stop along with the plane and hence come back to earth very quickly.
11/19/2007 3:27:40 PM
mythbusters is going to use an ultra light plane for this experiment. the pilot and crew were all wrong on their predictions on what would happen.
11/19/2007 4:05:50 PM
I feel like a failed engineer for ever being wrong on this one.
11/19/2007 4:17:38 PM
11/19/2007 4:46:10 PM
^
11/19/2007 6:51:07 PM
ok - the plane would not take off, if the treadmill was canceling out the plane's forward movement.the plane would* take off if the treadmill was assisting the plane in moving forward, however thatis a big god damn treadmill.bottom line here is aerodynamics. if the plane is stationary, it isn't going anywhere./thread]]
11/19/2007 7:34:34 PM
how the fuck would the treadmill hold the plane stationary? mofo has jet fucking engines.
11/19/2007 7:39:00 PM
TWW: discovering old-ass internet memes for the first time.
11/19/2007 7:42:21 PM
It can't take off the treadmill is making sure the wind speed over the wings at zero
11/19/2007 7:43:14 PM
here's an analogy for ya - pretend that one treadmill works as a dyno (like for car performance testing)the other is like the walkways in the airport that help you get across the terminal faster.
11/19/2007 7:46:56 PM
Why do they even test myths like this? Simple common sense could prove it wrong.
11/19/2007 7:49:11 PM
Lift is generated by the movement of air over the airfoils...if there is no forward movement of the plane then the air is not being moved over the airfoil and lift cannot be generated. End of Story.
11/19/2007 7:50:30 PM
i said that 7 posts ago
11/19/2007 7:51:12 PM
haha...yeah...but don't make me break out my Lift equation
11/19/2007 7:59:04 PM
imnotbeckers
11/19/2007 8:01:58 PM
11/19/2007 8:28:59 PM
11/19/2007 8:29:41 PM
11/19/2007 8:35:33 PM
If the treadmill is moving at 100% of takeoff speed, the plane will move forward.It the treadmill is moving at 1000% of takeoff speed, the plane will move forward.It the treadmill is moving at 10000% of takeoff speed, the plane will still...move forward.
11/19/2007 9:53:51 PM
Thank God somebody gets it
11/19/2007 9:55:04 PM