who have already solved the plane on a treadmill lets move onto the helicopter on the turntable. Anyone got any thoughts on this. Lets assume the turntable moves cw in one situation and ccw in another.
1/28/2008 8:59:46 PM
already a thread on this
1/28/2008 9:00:15 PM
10/10
1/28/2008 9:00:28 PM
that would be funky
1/28/2008 9:01:26 PM
the shear stresses on the body of the helicopter tear it apartit doesn't take off
1/28/2008 9:03:12 PM
Lets assume an ideal situation where the helicopter wouldn't rip apart
1/28/2008 9:03:54 PM
the pilot gets sick because of all the spinning and cancels the experimentit doesn't take off
1/28/2008 9:04:55 PM
autopilot take off. Don't try to ruin this shit you will fail.
1/28/2008 9:05:25 PM
http://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=506930
1/28/2008 9:05:35 PM
the helicopter rips apart or falls over and then rips apart
1/28/2008 9:05:44 PM
has this myth been submitted to mythbusters?
1/28/2008 9:06:26 PM
Assuming that the helicopter isn't going to break...If the turntable is moving in the same direction as the helicopter blades, I don't see any reason why it wouldn't take off.If the turntable is moving opposite the blades at the exact same speed, it wouldn't take off... if this scenario is even physically possible (seems like it would be). The blades would not be moving relative to the air at all, they would be stationary and the helicopter's body would be spinning beneath them. Again, this is assuming the scenario can physically be done, and that the helicopter is not going to break.
1/28/2008 9:07:02 PM
B.A. says "i ain't gettin in no chopter," and face and murdoch can't leave without himit doesn't take off
1/28/2008 9:08:41 PM
a helicopter made of a sturdy enough material to withstand the rotational shear forces and various torsions and filled the the necessary electronics to autopilot a helicopter would be too heavyit doesn't take off
1/28/2008 9:08:50 PM
Alternatively, the turntable and helicopter act as a massive drill, and the helicopter would anti-take-off, drilling a hole to the center of the earth.
1/28/2008 9:09:35 PM
1/28/2008 9:10:50 PM
Obviously the tail rotor is neglected in my explanation. ...Or it could be assumed that the turntable is spinning with an additional amount of force such that it compensates for the tail rotor... if this wouldn't invalidate the whole damn myth anyway.
1/28/2008 9:14:45 PM
1/28/2008 9:21:04 PM
If the turntable was frictionless/near-frictionless, it would take off easily.I think the scenario assumes that there is actually an outstandingly large amount of friction, such that the helicopter is basically horizontally fixed to the turntable, and can only move by taking off in the vertical axis. That's the way I pictured/interpreted it, anyway.
1/28/2008 9:26:28 PM
Well, if you imagine near infinite friction, then why can't the helicopter have near-infinite engine power?Can God microwave a burrito so hot even he/she can't eat it?
1/28/2008 9:29:47 PM
1/28/2008 9:33:30 PM
the problem with this myth is that there is no defined set of parameters. Which way does the thing spin? are the rotor blades on?
1/28/2008 9:35:57 PM
the problem with this myth is that it was proposed as an obvious joke.
1/28/2008 9:36:45 PM
^^ http://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=506930^ yeah, it was[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 9:39 PM. Reason : ]
1/28/2008 9:37:17 PM
^
1/28/2008 9:38:32 PM
1/28/2008 9:57:45 PM
The movement of the blades relative to the air should be enough to create lift, and unless the blades stopped after takeoff, it should remain in the air. Bear in mind that I'm assuming the helicopter is running, not just turned off sitting on a spinning platform.
1/28/2008 10:00:58 PM
no, if the table is spinning in the same direction as the blades, then some fraction of the driving force for lifting it is coming from the table, not the craft. It leaves the table, and unless you instantly increase the drive force from the craft, lift is insufficient to keep it up.
1/28/2008 10:02:44 PM
1/28/2008 10:05:56 PM
the idea whether or not the blades will be turning relative to the air at alli'm trying to visualize this one, pretty rough...but the way i'm thinking to an observer it would look like the platform and chopper body are rotating furiously while the blades are stationary. not taking the tail rotor into account...
1/28/2008 10:08:59 PM
^Assuming the table is rotating opposite to the spin of the blades, this is also how I visualized it at first.^^I might be misunderstanding the parameters, but wouldn't the top blades relative to the air be moving at double the normal speed if the turntable is moving the same direction and the helicopter is on? Then be moving at normal speed once it lifts off (not taking into account the continued momentum of the helicopter spinning)? Again, I'm ignoring tail rotor (inaccurate, yes, I know).[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:14 PM. Reason : .]
1/28/2008 10:11:33 PM
^^ yeah, but if you don't take the tail rotor, then you might as well not even say that it's a helicopter.Helicopters can't fly without a tail rotor (or device/mechanism that serves the same purpose).[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:13 PM. Reason : ]
1/28/2008 10:12:56 PM
then the velocity of the tail rotor would be insane, as it would have to be pushing the helicopter in the opposite direction to get the rotors to 'spin'as in, having a stationary helicopter take off using only its tail rotor
1/28/2008 10:17:07 PM
1/28/2008 10:17:22 PM
huh? if the turntable and blades were spinning the same direction, the helicopter would just take off in half the time since the acceleration time to get to take off speed would be cut in half
1/28/2008 10:21:22 PM
1/28/2008 10:24:51 PM
^^ yeah, it would take off in half the time, but it's not clear if it would be able to keep the rotors going fast enough before ti started to fall again.
1/28/2008 10:26:08 PM
Why would it fall if the blades are spinning at the same rate as a non-turntable-aided helicopter?
1/28/2008 10:27:38 PM
1/28/2008 10:29:08 PM
well, it would take off in half the time, but once off the ground the blades wouldn't be going fast enough and it would fall....k, reread what you wrote and it sounds like you were talking about the blades themselves spinning 2x required speed, rather than the whole unit spinning 2x
1/28/2008 10:30:11 PM
1/28/2008 10:31:14 PM
threads like these make me happy.Just imagine if this was a message board for Chapel Hill.
1/28/2008 10:33:36 PM
^^Ah, thanks for that explanation there. Mentally kicking myself for missing that particular fact.[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:35 PM. Reason : .]
1/28/2008 10:34:11 PM
^ Don't feel bad... on the original plane-on-a-treadmill thread in Lounge, I argued for a good 2 pages it wouldn't take off (with engines on) Chew on this though...if the treadmill pushing the plane forward doesn't help it, why to aircraft carriers use a catapult? [Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:38 PM. Reason : ]
1/28/2008 10:36:54 PM
wtf do you mean by friction.if blades for a normal craft to stay suspended in normal flying conditions is x rad/s, and you're saying that table is spinning at x rad/s, and the blades are spinning 2x rad/s relative to the ground, then there would be a net force m upwards equal to the mass of the craft. You would be tethering it down for it to not fly away before this point.^^ responded to that, and i think it got edited [Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:37 PM. Reason : ]
1/28/2008 10:36:59 PM
Chew on this though...if the treadmill pushing the plane forward doesn't help it, why do aircraft carriers use a catapult?[Edited on January 28, 2008 at 10:38 PM. Reason : reposted for great justice ]
1/28/2008 10:38:26 PM
it does help it get up.doesn't help it stay there.
1/28/2008 10:39:53 PM
1/28/2008 10:41:15 PM
it's not a trivial question.it's a philosophic one.
1/28/2008 10:42:54 PM
What does the catapult mean?
1/28/2008 10:43:38 PM