Can a Plane on a Treadmill Take Off?
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
		
 
alexy wrote: 
 Thomas Borchert  wrote: 
 
 Alexy, 
  
  The conveyor is programmed to move in such a way as to maintain the 
  aircraft at an airspeed of zero as measured at the pitot. 
  
  Absolutely, if you CHANGED the problem, and restated it as above, then 
  it wouldn't fly. 
  
  
 Actually, you couldn't do that - which is another point the question 
 makes. 
 
 True, from a practical standpoint. As far as the thought experiment 
 goes, you could if the conveyer moved fast enough that the rolling 
 friction of the tires plus the bearing friction of the wheels exactly 
 offset the thrust of the plane's propulsion system. 
 
The question, though, says that the wheels are built to take it. They 
must have frictionless bearings. g 
 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
		
	
	
	 |