odot
CC member # 17,----- DUP member # 7, mensa club m
I'll take some gerbil with that but twn won't share.
I watched it, and I felt they left out some very important factors. The focused on what the take off distance and speed was, but not the ammount of thrust used. That is a major factor in my book. If they used an ammount of thrust that only allowed the plan to move a maximum of 25mph on the ground, and the "craptacular conveyor belt" was also moveing at 25mph, would there have been any forward movement to get air under the wings?
The pilot used whatever ammount of thrust he wanted to take off, which could easily overcome the ammount of reverse directional thrust being created by the conveyor.
Least thats how I see it.
Not true. The tarp's speed has no effect on the plane's ability to push (or pull) against the air and propel itself forward.Wow, i'm shocked to see this post again. I better get my 2 cents in before its shut down. I was very vocal in our first post about this. On and on about the fact that i'm a pilot and insisting that the plane would not take off. I origionally said that if the belt speed was monitored to increase as the thrust of the plane increased then the plane would not take off. Seeing as the myth busters have no understanding or concept of flight they have once again F'ed up and jumped around like morons thinking that they proved somthing. Lets see them do that again with the car doing 70mph instead of 20. You'll be watching a plane get dragged backwords and those retards will have somthing to jump around about.
BUZZZZZZ! We have TWO losers!!!I watched it, and I felt they left out some very important factors. The focused on what the take off distance and speed was, but not the ammount of thrust used. That is a major factor in my book. If they used an ammount of thrust that only allowed the plan to move a maximum of 25mph on the ground, and the "craptacular conveyor belt" was also moveing at 25mph, would there have been any forward movement to get air under the wings?
The pilot used whatever ammount of thrust he wanted to take off, which could easily overcome the ammount of reverse directional thrust being created by the conveyor.
Least thats how I see it.
Ding ding ding, WE HAVE A WINNER, to do this right they need first get a calm day, get in the plane and take off using the minimal power they can to get off the ground and then check the rpm of the engine in the plane and the air speed indicator (if its calm then the Airspeed will be = to the ground speed.
Now take the plane, put it on the belt, start adding in power till the rpms match liftoff rpms in the first test and at the same time accelerate the car to the speed indicted in the airplane in the first test. If the plane takes off I'll eat the belt, the plane, the car and my fjr.
I am, unless there's a hundred mph headwind, which would keep my Feejer from moving forward....Anybody here going to NAFO?
12. What's your point?Wow, I put what makes sence in my mind on the board without insulting anyones intelligence and so far I've had mine insulted twice. You guy's are how old?
How do you argue with that???12. What's your point?
*********************How do you argue with that???12. What's your point?
At any rate, if anyone would like to discuss this topic with me, PM me. I'm not looking to argue or for a fight, I'm interested in view points and trying to really figure it out. Don't care if it can or cant, I just want to know why it can or can't.
What the hell does that have to do with oil?Looks like you can run that "experiment" in a variety of ways to get any answer you want..... The implecation is that the plane will take off on the treadmill but that must be a pretty long tread mill as the plane still needs a long ways to accelerate to a certain airspeed. If the treadmill doesn't keep it stationary then the treadmill needs to be as long as the runway to say the airplane would "take off on the treadmill"...otherwise it would run off the end of it getting up to the sufficient air speed.
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