Originally posted by Jeff 95 Z28
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Will it take off?
Collapse
X
-
Tracy
2002 C5 M6 Convertible
1994 Z28 M6 Convertible
Current Mods:
SLP Ultra-Z functional ramair, SS Spoiler, STB, SFCs, Headers, Clutch, Bilstein Shocks, and TB Airfoil. 17x9 SS rims with Goodyear tires, 160F T-Stat, MSD Blaster Coil, Taylor wires, Hurst billet shifter, Borla catback with QTP e-cutout, Tuned PCM, 1LE Swaybars, 1LE driveshaft, ES bushings, White gauges, C5 front brakes, !CAGS, Bose/Soundstream audio, CST leather interior, synthetic fluids
-
fastTa
Originally posted by TraceZThe scale changes nothing. As the airplane gets larger, so do all the forces including the thrust of the engine(s). The proportions remain unchaged for the most part. I recall the last time I flew on a large passenger jet being very impressed with the force that was pushing me back into my seat when we lifted off.
When a 747 taxis, it uses a very minimal amount of throttle. The engines barely have to even try to move that large airplane across the ground... it is nearly effortless for them.Still luv ya man!
I thought about this even more and here is the deal. It will ALL depend on the mass and most importantly the weight of the said aircraft. The lighter the aircraft the more it is a plausible event. The heavier the plane, and more importantly when approaching the size of a commercial aircraft, this becomes staggeringly less plausible.
Comment
-
fastTa
-
I'll make my final comments too.
The only way to keep the plane from flying in the system described would violate the original statement. That is why it is illogical.
The only way to keep the plane grounded against the thrust of the engines is with zero wheel speed. Any tire rotation at all means that the air speed and conveyor speed are not the same (violation).
There is some amount of force (very small compared to the engines capability) required to start a still plane moving. Once the wheels move, "free-wheeling begins" and any acceleration by the conveyor only spins the wheels faster and has virtually zero effect on the forward momentum fo the plane. Unfortunately, zero wheel speed from the observer means the plane is traveling backwards on the conveyor and therefore has a negative airspeed. Meaning the conveyor speed (or wheel speed) is not equal to plane speed. This violates the question parameters.
Here is another real problem I see. Think about the table cloth magic trick. Slow-pieces don't move, fast-everything stays in place. Airplane engines generate so much forward thrust, that a conveyor accelerating that quickly (even with a motionless plane) would start the wheels turning. There is an acceleration limit where the wheels will start to spin, instead of the plane moving.
The parameters of the question can never logically be met and any attempt to do so (ie. Mythbusters) will definately result in a flying plane. I am 100% sure of this. No conveyor system could ever stop the wheels from turning against the planes opposing thrust. If you could ever build such a theoretical system, the planes speed would not be equal to the conveyor speed.
I just brought the horse back to life, didn't I. hehehe1994 Z28, 6 spd, LE2 Heads, GM 1.6 RR, .026" head gasket, SLP: CAI-Headers (CARB legal)-ypipe-2 on the left-lightweight flywheel-short throw, Random tech cat, CF dual friction, LT-4 KM.
Comment
-
i have 3 golden retrievers and a wolfdog...........................
The Goldens: Reno and Rocky
2008 C6, M6, LS3, Corsa Extreme C/B, (it flys) & 2008 Yukon loaded (Titanic), 03 Ford Focus..everydaydriver.
Wolfdog Rescue Resources, Inc.:http://www.wrr-inc.org
Home Page: http://www.renokeo.com
sold: 97 Firehawk, 97 Comp T/A, 2005 GTO, 2008 Solstice GXP turbo.
Comment
-
Originally posted by 88bird5spdOk, so this is going around the 'net. HUGE threads of people arguing back and forth...
The question is:
Will the plane take off or not? Will it be able to run up and take off?
The plane WILL take off. The wheels do not affect the thrust of the airplane, they just support it. People cant seem to grasp the concept that they are free rotating wheels and this is not a wind tunnel we are talking about.93 t/a A4 3.23s
95 Formula A4 2.73s >>>>93 t/a 3.23 , !AIR, !cat, !A/C, hotchkis lowering springs, kyb adj shocks, DD
99 Camaro z28 a4, 2.73, !AIR, !A/C
99 Alfa Romeo 166 3.0 v6, red
97 3.8 v6 A4 camaro, hardtop
93 Camaro Z28 M6, hotcam kit, 150 shot, twin plate clutch, eibach pro kit and bilstein shocks, swaybars etc
00 audi a6 4.2 40 valve v8
Comment
-
lol93 t/a A4 3.23s
95 Formula A4 2.73s >>>>93 t/a 3.23 , !AIR, !cat, !A/C, hotchkis lowering springs, kyb adj shocks, DD
99 Camaro z28 a4, 2.73, !AIR, !A/C
99 Alfa Romeo 166 3.0 v6, red
97 3.8 v6 A4 camaro, hardtop
93 Camaro Z28 M6, hotcam kit, 150 shot, twin plate clutch, eibach pro kit and bilstein shocks, swaybars etc
00 audi a6 4.2 40 valve v8
Comment
-
Originally posted by thomasIts simple.. Theres no air moving over the wings so theres no lift so the plane does not fly..2002 Electron Blue Vette, 1SC, FE3/Z51, G92 3.15 gears, 308.9 RWHP 321.7 RWTQ (before any mods), SLP headers, Z06 exhaust, MSD Ignition Wires, AC Delco Iridium Spark Plugs, 160 t-stat, lots of ECM tuning
1995 Z28, many mods, SOLD
A proud member of the "F-Body Dirty Dozen"
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff 95 Z28The question says the plane "moves" in one direction. If it moves, there will be air flowing under and over the wing.
'87 Camaro - 2.8L MPFI, 700R4 swapped to T5, B&M Ripper Shifter, Dynomax Super Turbo muffler, CATCO high flow cat, K&N air filters, 180 degree thermostat w/200-180 fan switch, 3.42 rear end, Global West steering brace, polyurethane bushings/trans mount, Spohn adjustable torque arm.
'88 Formula (stolen), '96 Camaro RS, (sold), '91 Firebird (sold),
Bruce, μολων λαβέ
Comment
-
unless I read it wrong(probably did) The plane is really stationary. The only thing really moving is the belt that the planes on. right?
Let me go read it again, this time slowly
97 ws6 6sp 40k miles 355 cubes strange s 60 rear 373 gears. other stuff! 360rwhp
current
2006 GMC Denali 6.0 AWD!!!! hers
Comment
-
Originally posted by thomasunless I read it wrong(probably did) The plane is really stationary. The only thing really moving is the belt that the planes on. right?
Let me go read it again, this time slowly
you read it right, but you're forgetting, like I did at first, that the wheels spin freely and are not connected in any way to the acceleration of the plane. If the conveyor started moving under the plane by itself, the plane wouldn't move backwards, it would stay staionary while the wheels spun bacwards. Now apply thrust from the engines and the plane moves forward, just like it always would because the wheels play no part in moving the plane forward and bakward. Thrust from the engine moves the plane, regardless of what te ground or wheels are doing. The plane would move forward and fly like always.Dave M
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of all who threaten it!
Comment
-
Originally posted by thomasunless I read it wrong(probably did) The plane is really stationary. The only thing really moving is the belt that the planes on. right?1994 Z28, 6 spd, LE2 Heads, GM 1.6 RR, .026" head gasket, SLP: CAI-Headers (CARB legal)-ypipe-2 on the left-lightweight flywheel-short throw, Random tech cat, CF dual friction, LT-4 KM.
Comment
Comment