aerospacepilot
New Member
It was just hypothetical. No one was saying that an aircraft on a treadmill actually provided any benefit. I replied to you back on page one and said:
Ok, I get it now. I thought there was actually a purpose of this airplane/treadmill scenario. I thought people were trying to argue that if the treadmill moved backwards at the aircrafts takeoff speed, that the aircraft could take off without moving relative to the ground... thus allowing you to takeoff with almost 0 runway.
The way I understand this question now is, if a treadmill is moving backwards, can an airplane still take off? Of course it can. The wheels may be spinning at twice the speed, but the airplane is still moving forward at its takeoff speed (relative to the ground). So there is no benefit to the airplane/treadmill scenario.
Problem solved. This does not need debating. The answer is obvious. The question is just a very poor one.
Clocks, I know you went to ATP, but the moving forward at 60kts
(-60 + 60 = 0) comment means moving 60kts RELATIVE to the treadmill (which is moving backwards at 60kts). Thus the speed RELATIVE to the ground is 0kts. That is still correct. Maybe I did not make it clear what the reference frame was. After all, the airplane is moving 67,000mph RELATIVE to the sun. My mistake for not clearly stating my coordinate frame, but the comment is still correct.