Originally posted by: YOyoYOhowsDAjello
Originally posted by: Martin
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Exactly, it will take off. Helicopters do not require ground friction to take to the air--which is exactly why they can rise in height when they're 1mm from the ground and no longer touching it.Originally posted by: 911paramedic
That's what the tail rotor is for.
No, because that means the tail rotor would have to make the helicopter spin with respect to the turntable.
As people already mentioned, the blades would stay completely stationary and produce no lift.
So wouldn't this depend on the friction between the turntable and helicopter then?
If the tail rotor has enough force to overcome the friction between the helicopter and the turntable, then it's able to turn the blade relative to the air, and then take off?
Originally posted by: Acanthus
No lift, wouldnt take off.
<= Physics Major.[/q]
OK mister if you are so smart, prove your point.
I think the helicopter would tear itself apart before it would have a chance to take off.
Originally posted by: Number1
Originally posted by: Acanthus
No lift, wouldnt take off.
<= Physics Major.[/q]
OK mister if you are so smart, prove your point.
I think the helicopter would tear itself apart before it would have a chance to take off.
Im saying with simplification and eliminating the other factors like the tail prop somehow getting enough force to slow the spin of the turntable or something, equal spin in the other direction means there is no lift.
The whole principle of the helicopter is lift based on the rotation of the blades. If they blades arent rotating, there is no lift.
And yes, if a helicopter was spinning that fast it would almost certainly fly apart. So in a sense the pieces will be airborne for a short time 😉
Originally posted by: jimbob200521
If the turntable is spinning with opposite force, would it take off?
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: Number1
Originally posted by: Acanthus
No lift, wouldnt take off.
<= Physics Major.[/q]
OK mister if you are so smart, prove your point.
I think the helicopter would tear itself apart before it would have a chance to take off.
Im saying with simplification and eliminating the other factors like the tail prop somehow getting enough force to slow the spin of the turntable or something, equal spin in the other direction means there is no lift.
The whole principle of the helicopter is lift based on the rotation of the blades. If they blades arent rotating, there is no lift.
And yes, if a helicopter was spinning that fast it would almost certainly fly apart. So in a sense the pieces will be airborne for a short time 😉
Blade rotating 1 RPM clockwise
Helicopter rotating 1 RPM counter clockwise
Blade are still moving trough the air at 1 RPM, blade are producing lift.
Prove otherwise.
Originally posted by: YOyoYOhowsDAjello
Originally posted by: jimbob200521
If the turntable is spinning with opposite force, would it take off?
FORCE, not speed.
The force exerted by the turntable on the helicopter will not spin it up as fast as the blades will spin up in the opposite direction due to having lower inertia.
The blades will spin up faster than thus it should be able to take off.
EDIT:
<== Physics Minor
Originally posted by: Number1
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: Number1
Originally posted by: Acanthus
No lift, wouldnt take off.
<= Physics Major.[/q]
OK mister if you are so smart, prove your point.
I think the helicopter would tear itself apart before it would have a chance to take off.
Im saying with simplification and eliminating the other factors like the tail prop somehow getting enough force to slow the spin of the turntable or something, equal spin in the other direction means there is no lift.
The whole principle of the helicopter is lift based on the rotation of the blades. If they blades arent rotating, there is no lift.
And yes, if a helicopter was spinning that fast it would almost certainly fly apart. So in a sense the pieces will be airborne for a short time 😉
Blade rotating 1 RPM clockwise
Helicopter rotating 1 RPM counter clockwise
Blade are still moving trough the air at 1 RPM, blade are producing lift.
Prove otherwise.
Relative to the air, there would be no motion.
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: YOyoYOhowsDAjello
Originally posted by: jimbob200521
If the turntable is spinning with opposite force, would it take off?
FORCE, not speed.
The force exerted by the turntable on the helicopter will not spin it up as fast as the blades will spin up in the opposite direction due to having lower inertia.
The blades will spin up faster than thus it should be able to take off.
EDIT:
<== Physics Minor
It was a run and dump thread, my belief is that he meant speed and said force 😛
Originally posted by: SVT Cobra
No it wouldn't
And FFS people stop copying M4H with the "space for rent" posts, it is going to turn into another over done ATOT joke that will end up in the text ban filter.
Originally posted by: JMWarren
Maybe
PRIME AD SPACE FOR RENT!
Originally posted by: Bootprint
Is this what might be called a standard helicopter with a tail rotor?
Or a coaxial helicopter?
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Bootprint
Is this what might be called a standard helicopter with a tail rotor?
Or a coaxial helicopter?
Yeah, most Kamov designs would take off.
Originally posted by: Smartazz
I asked my physics teacher this and he thinks that it would not take off.