> Pixies wrote:
> There is an airflow created by the acceleration of air through the engine, however that airflow does not flow over the wings. Airflow over the wings produce lift. The thrust moving an aircraft forward means the aircraft is moving through ambient air, meaning an airflow is created over the wings. If a conveyer belt cancels this forward movement of the aircraft, the aircraft is effectively stationary in relation to the ambient air and so there is no airflow over the wings.
Due to the shape of a wing, air flowing over the top is accelerated more than the air beneath the wing. The faster the air flows, the lower the air pressure. So effectively a wing creates a region of lower pressure above it than below it, creating a net aerodynamic force upwards, called lift.
<
Obviously that is all bullcrap 
If you have a small enough plane with a strong enough engine it works. Only thing limiting it is the strength of the engine, although a propeller engine also creates its own life by blowing the air backwards no?
Or a couple of propellers mounted on the wings
Not many people know this, but I own the first radio in Springfield. Not much on the air then, just Edison reciting the alphabet over and over. "A" he'd say; then "B." "C" would usually follow...