airplane question
#11
RE: airplane question
yeah, im with TheX. imagine a car being on a dyno, wheels spin, car stays still. now, you do that, plus you add a huge jet engine on the back, and that car is going through the wall. the form of propulsion is not relative to the ground, it is relative to the air around it.
#12
RE: airplane question
X, best .gif evar! [sm=exactly.gif]
This is one of those classics that never goes away. It seems unintuitive that the motion of the plane isn't governed by its wheel-speed, especially when we all drive/ride around all day on machines that are governed by wheel-speed. But, for a plane, this is exactly the case. It wouldn't matter if the wheels were on a treadmill or not. The plane would behave exactly the same way, because it thrusts against the air, not the ground.
This is one of those classics that never goes away. It seems unintuitive that the motion of the plane isn't governed by its wheel-speed, especially when we all drive/ride around all day on machines that are governed by wheel-speed. But, for a plane, this is exactly the case. It wouldn't matter if the wheels were on a treadmill or not. The plane would behave exactly the same way, because it thrusts against the air, not the ground.
#13
#14
RE: airplane question
so where did this come from...are they actually thinking of doing this, or is it just one of those questions.
on a side note, this reminded me of something I thought of in like 8th grade in a science class, if you were driving 35MPH exactly north, and the wind was blowing at 35MPH exactly north, if you stick your hand out the window, will there be wind?
on a side note, this reminded me of something I thought of in like 8th grade in a science class, if you were driving 35MPH exactly north, and the wind was blowing at 35MPH exactly north, if you stick your hand out the window, will there be wind?
#15
RE: airplane question
ORIGINAL: rrasco
so where did this come from...are they actually thinking of doing this, or is it just one of those questions.
on a side note, this reminded me of something I thought of in like 8th grade in a science class, if you were driving 35MPH exactly north, and the wind was blowing at 35MPH exactly north, if you stick your hand out the window, will there be wind?
so where did this come from...are they actually thinking of doing this, or is it just one of those questions.
on a side note, this reminded me of something I thought of in like 8th grade in a science class, if you were driving 35MPH exactly north, and the wind was blowing at 35MPH exactly north, if you stick your hand out the window, will there be wind?
#16
#17
RE: airplane question
lift is from the bernoulli effect. Air moving over the top of the wing moves faster than the air on the bottom. This creates a low pressure area on top of the wing, lift forces are a function of wing area and pressure.
You don't even need the plane to move, just get some big fans to push the air at the plane and the bitch will float away.
You don't even need the plane to move, just get some big fans to push the air at the plane and the bitch will float away.
#18
RE: airplane question
jet propulsion works by the turbine creating force on the atoms of mass in the atmosphere. hence newton's laws...that matter will exert force back onto the turbine and the plane....so no matter if you bolt the wheels to the ground etc....some parts of that plane will fly....it'll just be the wings ripping from the fuselage lol....
#19
#20