Originally posted by sleepswithe30s
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Once and for f*cking all....
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Originally posted by sleepswithe30s View Postyou're fucking stupid
Its the planes speed relative to the air. Not the ground. and no, the air doesnt move the same speed as the ground
theres such a thing as wind you know.
I seriously hope for your sake that you're joking. Normal winds on earth will not lift a plane. And the "wind" created by the engines PUSH THE PLANE FORWARD, THEY DO NOT PROVIDE THE LIFT. What makes lift is when the plane moves forward RELATIVE TO THE GROUND (which happens to be the same as the speed relative to the stagnant air). Air traveling over and under the wings makes it lift, and if the plane is not moving relative to teh ground (or air: same thing) then there is no air moving around the wings.
You win the award for biggest dumb shit in the world. Go take a physics class.
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Originally posted by TwoJ's View PostThat's exactly my point dumb shit. You seriously amaze me with your stupidity. You said that the plane was moving with speed x AND THEN the thrust moves it forward more. How did the plane achieve this speed x before thrust?
edit, im not saying that the thrusters suddenly come on increasing the speed, I'm saying the pilot hammers the gas increasing the speed.
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Originally posted by mspiegle View PostAnd don't planes need to be pulled by a vehicle in order to go backwards? Further proof that there's nothing connected to the wheels.
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Originally posted by sleepswithe30s View Postahahahaha, I hope that wasnt a serious qeustion, no power is provided to the wheels at all on a plane, ever, It moves by pushing the air around it.
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Originally posted by sleepswithe30s View Postahahahaha, I hope that wasnt a serious qeustion, no power is provided to the wheels at all on a plane, ever, It moves by pushing the air around it.
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Originally posted by VacMan View PostI want to get in on the betting pool. We can each PayPal an amount to an unbiased 3rd party and the winner will get both PayPal amounts back with 10% going to the holder for his or her efforts.
The plane will fly.
If someone would like to take me up on it, name an amount and we'll take it from there. I would even be willing to bet one of the cars in my .sig on it, but I dunno if I could actually take someone's car regardless of how much physics they understand.
Let me know, I'm serious. :up:
Tim
For example: If the plane is on the belt and the belt is has an equal speed and opposite direction (plane is not moving relative to the ground), the plane will not take off. Want to bet on that?
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The wheels on a plane are like the rear wheels on a FWD car...they just turn. No power is applied to them.
That's all I'm going to offer. KTHXBYE
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Originally posted by TwoJ's View PostYou say the "thrust" does not come from the wheels, so how does it attain this speed x?
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Originally posted by JasonC View Postplane on treadmill video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EopVDgSPAk
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Originally posted by TwoJ's View PostOnce and for all, this question depends on only one thing: the speed of the plane relative to the earth.
Its the planes speed relative to the air. Not the ground. and no, the air doesnt move the same speed as the ground
theres such a thing as wind you know.
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Originally posted by Justin B View PostAll you people who say its not possible are completely retarded.
Sorry.
But why the hell was this thread ever even considered to be posted? I guess it does help to weed out the morons.
The plane is going forward at x speed, the belt is going back at x speed. wheels are travelling at 2x. thrust from an airplane does NOT come from the wheels. It just means the wheels will be spinning twice as fast as the plane is going at the SURROUNDING ground speed. More friction, sure, but not enough to make a difference.
Simple matter of fact is that all of you people don't understand simple classical physics. It's quite funny really.
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Originally posted by Ray Smoodiver View PostOh jesus fucking christ.
The engines don't provide LIFT, they provide THRUST.
If, as the problem states, the belt negates the engines THRUST, therefore with no air over the wings creating LIFT, how, exactly, does the plane take off?
let me make this simple.
engine push air, air pushed moves plane, Are you still with me?
ok
because plane moves, wheels spin, NOT because engines move wheels spin
are you still there?
Plane is not moving on a runway, engines arent turning
Plane is moving on runway engines are turning. Plane moves fast enough, it takes off.
Now this is what seems to be getting you, You seem to think that the conveyor will be capable of overcoming the thrust that the engines put out, I would just like to say that you are sorely mistaken. The plane just pushes so hard the the friction between the tires, road and bearings in negligable.
Therefor:
Plane on conveyor, conveyor turns, engines turn, but not much, plane is stopped, plane wont take off.
Plane turns on the after burners and pours the gas into the turbines, PUSHES LOTS OF AIR, moves forward, and takes off.
get it? I sure hope so, cause If you dont, I truly feel sorry for all the teachers to have taught you in the past, and you're parents too.
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Originally posted by einstein57 View PostAt least i'm not the only person who remembers the earth itself is a giant spinning treadmill that moves faster than an airplane does when it takes off.
Before responding to this thread, people should have at least a slight idea of how the world works. Or maybe at least understand the concept of relativity.
Once and for all, this question depends on only one thing: the speed of the plane relative to the earth.
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I can't believe there are so many retards around here.
Why the hell are you talking about the friction of the wheels? And what do you even mean by that? Friction between the belt and wheels? Between wheels and bearings? Doesn't matter though, it's irrelevent.
The answer to this problem is simple. It does not depend on friction of anything. It depends on the speed of the plane relative to the ground. That's it. No if's, and's or butt's.
So stop with this nonsense thrust vs. friction talk.
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