Moderators: eastlmark, BIG_MVS, phildini, Test Moderator, Alpineandy
Club Member
2381
Mon Jun 14, 2004 8:37 am
North Essex
David Gentleman wrote:I think Mich means the speed of the plane relevant to the ground (planet), ie if the plane is flying at 100mph, and a conveyer is going 100mph or the wheels are going 50mph makes do difference, its still 'flying' at 100mph..
Non Member
3474
Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
Colchester, Essex
Alpineandy wrote:David Gentleman wrote:I think Mich means the speed of the plane relevant to the ground (planet), ie if the plane is flying at 100mph, and a conveyer is going 100mph or the wheels are going 50mph makes do difference, its still 'flying' at 100mph..
Yes, I understood that.
The point is that a plane will not take of with thrust alone unless the thrust is verticule (a harrier). The speed that the conveyor moves at is not relevant.
The question that needs answering is 'does it generate enough air across it's wings to generate lift'.
The 'yes' or 'no' answer to the original question depends completely and utterly upon this answer and everything else is smoke and mirrors.
Non Member
3474
Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
Colchester, Essex
clee wrote:Is it a Harrier this plane I bet if it was a Dini it would take off tho.....................................
Non Member
5602
Thu Apr 15, 2004 12:33 pm
Fleet, Hampshire
Non Member
10431
Fri May 28, 2004 11:58 am
Derbyshire
David Gentleman wrote:clee wrote:Is it a Harrier this plane I bet if it was a Dini it would take off tho.....................................
Heres another one...
A Dini is sitting on a drag strip. The earth is turning at thousands of miles per hour. If it accellerates hard enough, will it have enough power to spin the earth in reverse?
Non Member
5602
Thu Apr 15, 2004 12:33 pm
Fleet, Hampshire
David Gentleman wrote:clee wrote:Is it a Harrier this plane I bet if it was a Dini it would take off tho.....................................
Heres another one...
A Dini is sitting on a drag strip. The earth is turning at thousands of miles per hour. If it accellerates hard enough, will it have enough power to spin the earth in reverse?
Club Member
2381
Mon Jun 14, 2004 8:37 am
North Essex
David Gentleman wrote:lol, youve fallen into the trap.
Ok, imagine there is not the jet engine pushing the plane forward, just a great big hydraulic piston pushing it forward (in theory at enough speed to be able to make the plane go fast enough and create lift, take off..)
Will putting the conveyer belt on in the opposite direction not make the hydraulic piston move the plane forward then?. The piston doesnt even know the conveyor belt exists, so why would turning it on have any effect on the forward motion of the piston/plane?
Non Member
1514
Tue Apr 12, 2005 12:24 am
Nr Chippenham, Wiltshire
Alpineandy wrote:
Can it generate enough lift?
That is the only relevant answer.
Non Member
302
Sat Apr 24, 2004 12:23 am
Penicuik, Scotland
Alpineandy wrote:mitchella wrote:The speed of the wheels and converyor belt is largely irrelevant.
So the speed of the plane relative to the ground does not have to depend on the speed of the conveyor/wheels.
A planes ability to take of is it's speed relative to the air, not the ground.
Air speed not ground speed. Could it get enough air across it's wings to generate lift?
Non Member
302
Sat Apr 24, 2004 12:23 am
Penicuik, Scotland
David Gentleman wrote:..you forgot to shut the doors, and load everybody's suitcases...theyre gonna be pissed....
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