no you wouldn't get any lift...
Last edited by CommieChipmunk (2006-12-26 13:07:24)
Last edited by CommieChipmunk (2006-12-26 13:07:24)
Last edited by Krauser98 (2006-12-26 13:09:49)
Check what I wrote on the previous page (4) ...Krauser98 wrote:
If you still believe a plane can not take off on a treadmill I'll get my professor / pilot dad to write a short paper about it and I'll post it on the internets.
I apologize for any double posting. Every time I delete the double it deletes both. Mods help please!
I think your covered. But, I don't think your taking this subject seriously enough.Krauser98 wrote:
OMG. If I could start flaming people and not get banned, I think I would. Instead, I would like to thank all the people who are supporting my answer.
All you people who say something about friction, you're crazy. Have you ever taken a physics class? Wheels create what is known as static friction. Basically (I'm not a physicist here, so I could use some help here) it means that the wheels have a constant grip on the ground and when a car's axle turns the wheel that grip pushes the car forward. When a car "peels out" it has overcome the static friction and the wheels are just sliding on the ground. In this scenario we are talking about a plane though. The friction between the wheels in the ground remains the same as it would regardless of the speed of the ground or treadmill. What the wheels do for the plane is negate the friction between the ground and the plane so that it can move forward when the engines provide thrust. The thrust does not come from the wheels moving. There is no axle tied between the jet and the wheels, nor are there any cables which make them spin. If you turned an airplane upside down and fire up the engines, the wheels probably wouldn't spin very much.
Up north I believe it is very common for a plane to take off on ice, they just have skis on them. This would be similar to your treadmill question in that the wheels wouldn't be useful (if you still believe the wheels are what makes a plane move forward then they would just slide on the ice.) Also, sea planes take off in water that is moving the other direction all the time... If you still believe a plane can not take off on a treadmill I'll get my professor / pilot dad to write a short paper about it and I'll post it on the internets.
Edit: I posted this without realizing there were more pages. I'm not changing anything though. For those of you who still believe the treadmill moving backwards prevents the plane from moving forwards: Please explain to me how the treadmill affects the air traveling through the jet / prop. The jet / prop pushes off the air (not the ground), which moves the plane forward, which moves the air past the wings (the forward motion moves the air past the wings, not the jet / prop), which creates lift, which makes planes fly. I would like to reiterate that the wheels simply allow a plane to easily slide across the ground and are not connected to any form of motion generating power.
I apologize for any double posting. Every time I delete the double it deletes both. Mods help please!
Last edited by JG1567JG (2006-12-26 13:31:29)
Last edited by TPM-J45P3R- (2006-12-26 13:34:57)
That's not the same 'cos it doesn't have wheels that rotate ass fast as they want. That's like comparing car with round tires with a car with square tiresJG1567JG wrote:
Answer this then. A float-plane is going to try to take off going upriver on a windless day and the river was flowing at 100mph. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to get lift off. The planes max speed is 80mph. What will happen when the plane trys to take off?
It would fall back to the river after almost taking offJG1567JG wrote:
Edit--> Also what will happen if it turns downriver and cuts off the engines
Last edited by tupla_s (2006-12-26 13:36:36)
The first question isn't the same but the same principle applies. The plane would float downriver backwards at 20mph.tupla_s wrote:
That's not the same 'cos it doesn't have wheels that rotate ass fast as they want like planes that take of from the groundJG1567JG wrote:
Answer this then. A float-plane is going to try to take off going upriver on a windless day and the river was flowing at 100mph. The plane only needs 30mph wind speed to get lift off. The planes max speed is 80mph. What will happen when the plane tries to take off?It would fall back to the river after almost taking offJG1567JG wrote:
Edit--> Also what will happen if it turns downriver and cuts off the engines
Last edited by JG1567JG (2006-12-26 13:41:44)
Last edited by djphetal (2006-12-26 13:45:35)
depends what the lift co-efficient of the plane wasJG1567JG wrote:
and glide untill the plane fell back to the river.
FredFLQ wrote:
QFTd3athwi5h4 wrote:
No, the plane being stationary wouldn't create any lift
Is this what you ment?TPM-J45P3R- wrote:
Like i wrote first..
If so look back another pageTPM-J45P3R- wrote:
A diagram to see if people understand,
http://www.qfom.com.au/images/how_wings.gif
To put it simple, there is NO airflow over the wing on a treadmill, the wheels are there only for movement on the ground. For the aircraft to takeoff the aircraft would have to equal the opposite force, and then over that speed to its Vr speed.
Eg: Treadmill @ 200mph opposite speed,
If the aircraft had a takeoff speed of say 200mph (no less),
Then for it to takeoff the aircraft would have to have a measured ground speed of 400mph, to counteract the movement of the 'ground'
Now I hope that makes some sense as I am half soaked
By the way we are in agreement on the question at hand.JG1567JG wrote:
I already said no on page 1 and I will explain why a little better.
If you have a plane/jet on the east end of a runway facing west. The runway acts as a large treadmill running in the opposite direction that the plane is going to take off. the runway itself moves from west to east and can match the planes speed and thrust. When the plane powers up the engines and the runway starts to move matching the planes speed, the plane would appear to sit still. The engines thrust would only stop it from going backwards off the runway.
Plane -->------>------>------> 300mph (wheelspeed because the plane would have no airspeed)
Runway <----<------<-----<-- 300mph
The plane wouldn't create any lift since the runway would counteract any speed the plane was able to create.
Now if the plane slowed to 200mph(wheel speed) and the runway stayed at 300mph the plane would go off the back of the runway.
If the plane would speed up to say 400mph (wheel speed) and the runway stayed at 300mph then the plane would move forward at 100mph (air speed). If the plane only needed 100mph to take off then it would.
Last edited by JG1567JG (2006-12-26 14:05:05)
He is absolutely correct. Like I said, it's all about airflow over the wings. Lift is created when air travelling over the top of the wing is forced to move faster than the air moving under the bottom of the wing (due to the curved upper surface). This creates an area of low pressure on top of the wing, which creates the lift. If the air isn't travelling fast enough you get no lift.......so like JG1567JG says, no airspeed=no lift.JG1567JG wrote:
I already said no on page 1 and I will explain why a little better.
If you have a plane/jet on the east end of a runway facing west. The runway acts as a large treadmill running in the opposite direction that the plane is going to take off. the runway itself moves from west to east and can match the planes speed and thrust. When the plane powers up the engines and the runway starts to move matching the planes speed, the plane would appear to sit still. The engines thrust would only stop it from going backwards off the runway.
Plane -->------>------>------> 300mph (wheelspeed because the plane would have no airspeed)
Runway <----<------<-----<-- 300mph
The plane wouldn't create any lift since the runway would counteract any speed the plane was able to create.
Now if the plane slowed to 200mph(wheel speed) and the runway stayed at 300mph the plane would go off the back of the runway.
If the plane would speed up to say 400mph (wheel speed) and the runway stayed at 300mph then the plane would move forward at 100mph (air speed). If the plane only needed 100mph to take off then it would.
ah you already wrote it!JG1567JG wrote:
Is this what you ment?TPM-J45P3R- wrote:
Like i wrote first..If so look back another pageTPM-J45P3R- wrote:
A diagram to see if people understand,
http://www.qfom.com.au/images/how_wings.gif
To put it simple, there is NO airflow over the wing on a treadmill, the wheels are there only for movement on the ground. For the aircraft to takeoff the aircraft would have to equal the opposite force, and then over that speed to its Vr speed.
Eg: Treadmill @ 200mph opposite speed,
If the aircraft had a takeoff speed of say 200mph (no less),
Then for it to takeoff the aircraft would have to have a measured ground speed of 400mph, to counteract the movement of the 'ground'
Now I hope that makes some sense as I am half soakedJG1567JG wrote:
I already said no on page 1 and I will explain why a little better.
If you have a plane/jet on the east end of a runway facing west. The runway acts as a large treadmill running in the opposite direction that the plane is going to take off. the runway itself moves from west to east and can match the planes speed and thrust. When the plane powers up the engines and the runway starts to move matching the planes speed, the plane would appear to sit still. The engines thrust would only stop it from going backwards off the runway.
Plane -->------>------>------> 300mph (wheelspeed because the plane would have no airspeed)
Runway <----<------<-----<-- 300mph
The plane wouldn't create any lift since the runway would counteract any speed the plane was able to create.
Now if the plane slowed to 200mph(wheel speed) and the runway stayed at 300mph the plane would go off the back of the runway.
If the plane would speed up to say 400mph (wheel speed) and the runway stayed at 300mph then the plane would move forward at 100mph (air speed). If the plane only needed 100mph to take off then it would.
Last edited by TPM-J45P3R- (2006-12-26 14:05:42)
It's all good just having fun +1 to youTPM-J45P3R- wrote:
ah you already wrote it!
It's gonna go backwords at 20 mph, and not be able to take off. If he turns downwind and kills the engine, he becomes a boat going 100 mph in the river's current.JG1567JG wrote:
Answer this then. A float-plane is going to try to take off going upriver on a windless day and the river was flowing at 100mph. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to get lift off. The planes max speed is 80mph. What will happen when the plane trys to take off?
Edit--> Also what will happen if it turns downriver and cuts off the engines
Last edited by [RDH]Warlord (2006-12-26 14:09:24)
Correct on the first but think about the second one a bit. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to take off.D6717C wrote:
It's gonna go backwords at 20 mph, and not be able to take off. If he turns downwind and kills the engine, he becomes a boat going 100 mph in the river's current.JG1567JG wrote:
Answer this then. A float-plane is going to try to take off going upriver on a windless day and the river was flowing at 100mph. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to get lift off. The planes max speed is 80mph. What will happen when the plane trys to take off?
Edit--> Also what will happen if it turns downriver and cuts off the engines
Last edited by [RDH]Warlord (2006-12-26 14:12:44)
Now, I want to tackle this situation. Are we ignoring the fact that a floating plane would never go as fast as the river itself due to air friction? Are we assuming that all air above the river is standing rock still, not affected by the water below it?JG1567JG wrote:
Correct on the first but think about the second one a bit. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to take off.D6717C wrote:
It's gonna go backwords at 20 mph, and not be able to take off. If he turns downwind and kills the engine, he becomes a boat going 100 mph in the river's current.JG1567JG wrote:
Answer this then. A float-plane is going to try to take off going upriver on a windless day and the river was flowing at 100mph. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to get lift off. The planes max speed is 80mph. What will happen when the plane trys to take off?
Edit--> Also what will happen if it turns downriver and cuts off the engines
Last edited by JG1567JG (2006-12-26 14:22:17)
Wow just wow do you want to include the bird that is going to fly by causing an effect on the airflow and the fish that are swimming changing the current. I never said the plane would float at 100mph[RDH]Warlord wrote:
Now, I want to tackle this situation. Are we ignoring the fact that a floating plane would never go as fast as the river itself due to air friction? Are we assuming that all air above the river is standing rock still, not affected by the water below it?JG1567JG wrote:
Correct on the first but think about the second one a bit. The plane only needs 30mph windspeed to take off.D6717C wrote:
It's gonna go backwords at 20 mph, and not be able to take off. If he turns downwind and kills the engine, he becomes a boat going 100 mph in the river's current.
Last edited by JG1567JG (2006-12-26 14:20:41)