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Let's say you had a giant treadmill with an airplane on it

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XPOO,

Is that a pic of Brittney Cabbin' me?

That's a picture of Mrs. Spears-Alexander-Federline addressing the lucky PAX that actually worshipped her before, much like that aircraft she's on, her career took a nose dive.

I really need to find a new hot chick in a stew outfit that I can publish as my avatar. Sadly, I can't find a good picture of Gweneth Paltrow in View From the Top. Anyone have any suggestions?

BTW, I don't think we have performance numbers for a treadmill-like runway. This sounds like a go/no-go situation. I'll stick with no-go.
 
The treadmill ABSOLUTELY will try maintain the airplane at a relative standstill. But it can't. It's not a trick question or flawed.

This thread followed to a tee the same pattern as the first time it was posted. Typical pilots will argue until they realize that they are wrong, and THEN blame the way the question was worded or the immigrants or whatever it takes to save face.

Same guys that blame the airplane when they make a crappy landing
 
Typical pilots will argue until they realize that they are wrong, and THEN blame the way the question was worded or the immigrants or whatever it takes to save face.


http://www.straightdope.com/columns/060203.html

On first encounter this question, which has been showing up all over the Net, seems inane because the answer seems so obvious. However, as with the infamous Monty-Hall-three-doors-and-one-prize-problem (see The Straight Dope: "On Let's Make a Deal" you pick Door #1, 02-Nov-1990), the obvious answer is wrong, and you, Berj, are right--the plane takes off normally, with no need to specify frictionless wheels or any other such foolishness. You're also right that the question is often worded badly, leading to confusion, arguments, etc. In short, we've got a topic screaming for the Straight Dope.


Key words: worded and badly.
 
Ohhhh i see now.. this is not a physics riddle... its a CRM exercise... in which case i will be the first to take the hit in an effort to dissolve the situation and end this mindless waste of time..

Your right coopervane.. How did i not see it before.. I just read that hair stylists website back a few pages ago and it all comes together now, I never considered that we could use rockets or something of the sort.. Maybe a harrier or one of those nifty new vectored thrust jets..

I can just see it now.. "Aviation, so easy a caveman can do it"

On another note... Chuck Norris can surely run faster than this super dooper treadmill.. Why dont we ask him!!
 
Diverted discussion away from that ridiculous PIC logging argument didn't it?

My only goal was achieved..
 
JHC, I cannot believe this thread came back...which once again proves that it doesn't take an engineering degree to become a pilot, but that likewise it doesn't take full knowledge of why an airplane flies for somebody to take off and land without disclosing that fact ...SCARY!!!

Listen up. The only relevance a moving surface would have on the aircraft's ability to positively affect its relative motion is if the aircraft's thrust was enacted through the point of contact in question, the treadmill in this case. If it wasn't clear in PPL ground school, let me refresh the class: that cessna is NOT a car....repeat with me, IT'S NOT A CAR.

The thrust created by the engine, whether the propeller driven or jet persuasion alike, is translated through a different medium, not the ground, but the fluid we call air. Therefore, the only force the aircraft has to overcome on initial takeoff is the static friction force to make the tires begin to roll. As you can see the fact that the airplane is sitting on a moving or stationary platform is irrelevant to it. Taking into consideration the assumption that tire limit rotational speed is neglected, it doesn't matter how fast that treadmill is moving, all the airplanes sees is air beginning to rush through its wings once you push up that/those throttle(s).

To further illustrate the point of why force medium matters, clamp a rope to the front end of the aircraft to a post at the end of the treadmill, a stationary fix. Now, crank that treadmill into uber-ridiculous speed...what happens to the aircraft's relative motion with respect to the air? Nothing, the airplane sits there fat dumb and happy, 0 KIAS, with the tires spinning at the tire equivalent rpm for uber-ridiculous speed. Now what about the rope? hmm...yep, once again nothing. Furthermore, the tension force will STILL be nothing more than the friction force required to make the tires begin to roll from rest.

Now, push up the throttle, what happens? Holy crap a miracle! The rope slacks and the mighty cessna moves forward with respect to the air and the tires still on fire at uber-ridiculous speed-rpm+(rpm equivalent to X KIAS). But wait. Let's put skids on that son'b%tch, assume the treadmill is now an icy treadmill, and what happens? No way! It still moves relative to the air REGARDLESS of that moving treadmill at uber-ridiculous speed.

In a real world scenario, what would happen is that the takeoff roll would be increased by the initial head-start you gave the treadmill as it began moving the aircraft backwards with respect to the air as you sat there wondering to yourself if this experiment was going to work or not. A takeoff with an initial tailwind if you want to look at it in more familiar fashion. After brake release, throttles up, the wheels start rolling and you're moving forward w.r.t. the air son.

IF the aircraft had to overcome the speed of the treadmill by means of enacting its thrust by rotating the wheels, then the treadmill would be relevant. Look at it this way. Your bass boat is going up the river and the stream is wayyy too fast for that mercury, your buddies at both banks see you sitting there idling with respect to them, at max power, and throw you a rope, then pull you in. Are they able to pull you in in spite of the wicked fast stream? Sure. And that's a worse case scenario than the airplane on a treadmill, as the water will create higher parasite drag the faster the stream, which means billy bob needs to pull a little harder, whereas the aircraft tires will keep the friction force constant no matter the speed of the treadmill. So, if you can at least buy the "buddies pull you with positive relative motion in spite of the river speed" scenario then convince yourself that strapping an IO-360, with included propeller, to your head while you duct tape yourself to your bass boat is AN EQUIVALENT SYSTEM PROBLEM!!!!

If you cannot convince yourself of the latter, you need to go back to high school physics, for you will never understand why the airplane WILL attain flying airspeed regardless of a moving ground surface. F%ck, I need my g/f...and a drink. :D

That's one hell of a dissertation, assuming the aircraft is tied to a post with a rope.
 
The treadmill ABSOLUTELY will try maintain the airplane at a relative standstill. But it can't. It's not a trick question or flawed.

This thread followed to a tee the same pattern as the first time it was posted. Typical pilots will argue until they realize that they are wrong, and THEN blame the way the question was worded or the immigrants or whatever it takes to save face.

Same guys that blame the airplane when they make a crappy landing
As you add power and begin to move for the takoff roll, the treadmill speeds up and keeps the plane in the same relative position. As the plane goes faster, the treadmill speeds up, always maintaining the aircraft's relative position.


Ya' can't have it both ways. Either it keeps up as you origionally stated OR it can't. Pick one, stick with it and ask the question.
 

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