> A10 wrote:
> >The wheels and conveyer belt are of equal and opposite velocitites, but after a point due to a lack of the wheels capabilites of turning FOR SOME REASON, the wheels start to slide over the conveyer belt accelerating the aircraft from 0m/s to some take off velocity.
No. The wheels don't start sliding. The conveyor can never put more then 2klb of force apposing the plane. The wheels still turn at the same speed as the conveyor which is now the speed the conveyor was going when the plane was being held back by the conveyor [PLUS] the planes speed relative to the observer. The plane accelerates and takes off with it's wheels now spinning [Much faster then normal].
The wheels don't skid when the plane starts to move relative to the observer. The wheels/conveyor just move faster. The conveyor can't push against the plane more then 2klb which isn't going to stop a 747's 200klb of potential thrust.
@Avo
Maybe you don't get that this problem is NOT about can a plane take off when standing still. It's really asking can a conveyor hold back a plane. A conveyor can hold back a car, but it cannot hold back a plane. That's what I've been writing. That's what you don't get. You keep talking about the conveyor continually matching the wheel speed and thinking that has any effect. The conveyor just can provide enough friction to hold back a plane. End of story.
Avo Don't talk to me until you shave.
See Pixie, told you, you were giving him too much credit.
ok, A10, why do you think the question isnt asking whether a plane can take off when standing still, but that its asking if a conveyor can hold back a plane? we are not saying the conveyor is holding it back. imagine a toy plane in your hand. imagine, your hand is the air that the plane is pushing off of. now, when you have the plane on the ground standing still, the wheel speed is the same as the ground speed. now, by moving the plane on the ground, without making the wheels slide, try to make it so the wheels are not rolling forward faster then the ground, is rolling back. that is what you're claiming the plane is doing. do you see how that doesnt make sense?