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#16
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote in message
ups.com... But wait a minute. A good frisbee thrower can make a frisbee rise straight up (like a golf ball does). The frisbee may take one path for awhile but then starts heading up, just like a properly hit golf ball Yes. As I said in a different post, there are subtle aerodynamic effects that can be used to affect the exact flight path of the frisbee. Release attitude (pitch and roll), initial flight path, rotation speed, even impact (intentional or otherwise ![]() all have small-but-interesting-and-useful effects on the exact course the frisbee follows. But those are very minor, the frisbee at all times is following basic rules of inertia and lift (without the radical changes in configuration that CJ's post suggests), and the original question was simply how does the frisbee *fly*. That is, why is it possible to throw a frisbee and have it maintain any stable path, and remain aloft longer than a thrown rock would. Pete |
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