troopernflight
Well-Known Member
I'm just going to say NO for the record, since I know the plane's not going to take off.
I use my feet to move across the "ground", the airplane uses it's engine to push or pull the airplane across the "ground".
You should have made the poll public so that we know who to mock afterwards.Yes or No only.
Will Adam and Jamie mess the whole thing up? Maybe... but that's for tomorrow's pole.
No, it uses its engine to push it through the air. As long as the wheels turn freely, it doesn't matter what the ground does.
That's the common misconception. An airplane does not use it's engine to move across the ground like a car.
I think a better test would be to borrow the nimitz from the Navy put it at flank speed and see if a piper cub would take off chocked.
During takeoff, the engine moves the airplane across the ground. If you can overcome friction, and the additional movement of the treadmill in this case, the object - plane, me, R/C car, cat, whatever - moves forward.
Only as a side effect of it moving through the air. As long as the interface between the ground and the aircraft is through a free-spinning wheel, it doesn't matter what the ground is doing. With a strong enough headwind, it doesn't have to move over the ground at all.During takeoff, the engine moves the airplane across the ground.
That's a redundant statement; if the aircraft overcomes friction, it is already overcoming the motion of the treadmill. the only way the treadmill can inhibit the aircraft is through wheel bearing friction, which as has already been pointed out, does not increase with speed.If you can overcome friction, and the additional movement of the treadmill in this case
The guy on youtube did a second test:
That is accurate, but it doesn't agree with your later statement:Airspeed is what makes an airplane fly.
If airspeed makes an airplane fly, why do you say it must accelerate to groundspeed + required airspeed? Like you said before, all it needs is the required airspeed. Groundspeed is irrelevant.Now, if the treadmill were moving rearward under its own power, the airplane would first have to excede the treadmill's readward pace (ie, accelerate to a groundspeed of the treadmill + required indicated airspeed) in order to takeoff.
Assuming flank speed is greater than the takeoff speed of a Piper Cub, of course it would. The Cub does not care what the ground under its wheels is doing, only the airflow over its wings.granlistillo said:I think a better test would be to borrow the nimitz from the Navy put it at flank speed and see if a piper cub would take off chocked.