2008-01-30, 11:28 PM | #126 | |
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Quote:
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2008-01-30, 11:51 PM | #127 | |
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Quote:
Granted, the question as it was posed on NASIOC was poorly worded, but the intent was indeed to show the difference between thrust via air vs. thrust via wheel. But even if you want tackle the stupid messed up version, then you're still dealing with a treadmill/wheel combo that accelerates to infinity that cannot create a force that prevents the plane from taking off. Because the wheels can't exert a force on the plane, no matter what the treadmill does it can't stop the plane from taking off. You can take every semantic argument you want about how the plane "isn't allowed" to move by the wording, or "treadmills can't spin that fast", or "the wheel bearings would melt", etc and blow them out your ass because without a way for the wheels to impart a force opposite the engine thrust, the plane will accelerate down the treadmill and take off.
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2008-01-31, 12:02 AM | #128 | |
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Did you really just say infinity mph + takeoff speed? And the wheels can't exert force on a plane? Do we also live in a vacuum for this experiment?
If you use the version of the question linked from Corner Carvers, it's a slam-dunk, the plane flies. The version you posted is not "poorly posed". It's a paradox like Dean said. Quote:
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2008-01-31, 08:00 AM | #129 |
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This is what would happen if you started talking about this question at work...
how to get rid of annoying co-workers. http://break.com/index/how-to-get-ri...o-workers.html
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2008-01-31, 08:05 AM | #130 |
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2008-01-31, 09:23 AM | #131 |
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Let's put an F15 on the magical conveyor, shall we? And draw a free-body diagram of it for us engineering types:
Thrust Force Ft = 50,000 lbs Aerodynamic resistance Fa=? but it is negligable compared to 50k lbs for our purposes = 0 Mass M = 32,000lbm F = MA I would like somebody to tell me how a conveyor, no matter how magical, can hold back that jet by touching those little tiny freewheeling wheels. |
2008-01-31, 09:25 AM | #132 |
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Never underestimate the power of semantic arguments on the intarwebs. ALL. POWERFUL.
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2008-01-31, 09:28 AM | #133 |
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Friction from the wheel bearings?
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2008-01-31, 09:32 AM | #134 |
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BTW in engineering/science when somebody talks about the speed of something, especially something that spins or rotates as well as displaces, they generally are talking about the speed of the centroid of the object. The speed of the wheels' centroid is the same as the speed of the plane, because they are attached to the plane at their centroid (approximately - but very close). They didn't say "surface speed" or rotatiomal speed" in the question. So the conveyor is moving at the speed of the plane in the opposite direction, so the wheels would be spinning twice as fast with this magical conveyor as they would normally.
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2008-01-31, 09:56 AM | #135 |
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STOP SAYING MAGICAL CONVEYOR!!!
im over it. This thread sucks
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2008-01-31, 10:36 AM | #136 |
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magical conveyor... magical conveyor... magical conveyor... magical conveyor...
"In the world of magic... everything is an illusion! Thank youuuu." RIP Doug Henning... sniff... sniff... |
2008-01-31, 11:38 AM | #137 | |
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Quote:
I'll put it in terms that I've seen used recently. I would like somebody to tell me how a plane can take off when it's wheels are not allowed to spin any faster than the conveyor belt it's sitting on which always matches it's wheel speed in the reverse direction? And I don't want to hear any BS about the wheels slipping on the surface of the conveyor or the plane being a harrier. Solve the problem we're given, not the one in your head that's based on a realistic conveyor.
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2008-01-31, 11:53 AM | #138 |
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lock it now...
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2008-01-31, 11:54 AM | #139 | |
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Quote:
You are officially old.
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2008-01-31, 11:59 AM | #140 | |
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I miss my 74 Cutlass. |
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2008-01-31, 12:01 PM | #141 |
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2008-01-31, 12:18 PM | #142 | ||
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Quote:
While we're at it, let's go ahead and put the first conveyor belt on another conveyor belt that moves the plane and first conveyor belt at the right speed for the plane to take off. Quote:
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Slow and low, that is the tempo. Last edited by cody; 2008-01-31 at 12:20 PM. |
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2008-01-31, 01:45 PM | #143 | |
EJ205
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Quote:
If the plane is at rest, the wheels are too - going 0mph, and the conveyor belt is not moving either. If the plane is going 5mph, the wheels are also going 5mph (right along with the plane they are attached to no matter how fast they are spinning). The conveyor belt is going -5mph (the "-" meaning the opposite direction). If the plane had a speedo connected to the wheels it would falsely read 10mph. You would use 10mph to calculate the RPM of the wheels given the diameter. If the take-off speed of the plane is 150mph, the wheels are also going 150mph (moving right along with the plane). The conveyor belt is going -150mph. If the plane had a speedo connected to the wheels it would falsely read 300mph. You would use 300mph to calculate the RPM of the wheels given the diameter. Whenever you talk about the speed of one thing versus another, like say a wheel versus a conveyor belt (note it says "belt" not roller nor the whole conveyor), you have to use the same units of measure. I have designed and spec'd 100's of conveyors. When you talk about conveyor belt speed the unit of measure is m/sec, or feet/sec - in other words linear speed which of course mph is. Rotational speed is not the same thing - an object can be spinning at 1000 rpm and still be going 0m/sec (like a house fan for example). So if you are going to say that a conveyor belt is going "to exactly match the speed" as a wheel it has to be in linear speed units. |
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2008-01-31, 01:48 PM | #144 | |
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Quote:
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2008-01-31, 02:17 PM | #145 |
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Holy fucking stupid shit.
The wheels are free spinning, ans as such, cannot transmit any torque to the aircraft!!! The wheels play no part of this problem.
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2008-01-31, 02:25 PM | #146 | |
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Quote:
Ya'll can argue all day long about the wording of the question, but at the end of the day, you still can't explain how any wheel/treadmill interaction can create an appreciable force that could overcome the thrust of the plane's engine and prevent it from taking off. And that's really the answer. A treadmill cannot affect a plane's takeoff, because the plane's thrust is from the prop/jet pushing against the air, not through the wheels to the ground/treadmill/ice/water/giant block of jello/etc. Sure in the real world, there's friction in the bearings, and rolling resistance of the tire, etc, but nothing that's at all significant in proportion to the engine thrust. How this argument ever got so big is beyond me... I think people just decided to argue about it 'cause it's the internet and that's what people do, but somewhere along the line the people playing devil's advocate started believing their own bullshit and ended up convincing a bunch of stubborn retards with popsicles that the plane couldn't take off.
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2008-01-31, 02:29 PM | #147 | |
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Quote:
When I read the question, I believed it was referring to the above type of measurements when it uses the word "speed". I certainly defer to those of you that obviously know more about physics based terminology than I do. However, I do maintain that if if the word "speed" in the problem refers to rotational speed at the outside of the wheels (RE: what typical speedometers in cars and trucks display), without a harrier or a slipping tire, the plane is prevented from moving forward by the constraints of the problem (RE: wheel speed is matched by conveyor in opposite direction). Furthermore, as soon as any thrust is exerted on the plane at all (presumably by the props/jets), the wheels would instantly accelerate to infinite MPH and SECCS would implode into a blackhole that sucks my brain out through my nose.
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2008-01-31, 02:35 PM | #148 |
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The question is obviously worded poorly, because reasonable people (and Dean too ) disagree on the basic constraints. I made the case for how I see it, and I... am... done.
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2008-01-31, 02:46 PM | #149 | |
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Quote:
The question doesn't define the terms so there are two answers. I really wish the question would have stipulated how the speed is measured so that only one answer would be correct.
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2008-01-31, 03:12 PM | #150 | |
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Quote:
So, really it's a straight forwards riddle to see if you understand the difference between the thrust of an airplane engine vs. the thrust of a car via its wheels. If it was meant to be more than that, don't you think it would have been worded very carefully to describe the speed matching feature of the treadmill?
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