Originally posted by: PaperclipGod
Originally posted by: loic2003
Originally posted by: Phokus
can someone explain the conundrum plz?
You have a large treadmill/conveyor belt. It matches the speed of wheels, so if you put a car (or any vehicle that moves by physically turning it's wheels) and drove forward at 10mph, the mill would automatically move at 10mph in the opposite direction, so viewing the car from the side would show that the car doesn't actually move anywhere dispite it's wheels turning.
Then you take an airplane, and put that on the conveyor. Some idiots couldn't figure that planes use thrust to move, so wheel speed is irrelevant (think planes with skids for landing on snow or water). As the thrust of the plane moved it forward, the conveyor would try to keep up, but would always be slower than the aircraft's wheels since the plane is moving forward. Theoretically, the conveyor speed would increase (exponentially?) until the aircraft took off.
It really highlighted some serious idiots who thought planes had powered wheels or that the speed of the wheels made a difference to the thrust of the aircraft (bearing resistance has been ignored in this example).
But because the speed of the treadmill increases slowly, the treadmill will act on the wheels by pulling the plane backward.
You cant just ignore bearing resistance. So when the plane has revved up to 200mph, the treadmill is pulling backwards on the aircraft at 200mph. It wont go anywhere.
Hmm... one engine on a 747 produces about 55,000 lbs of thrust or about 245,000 Newtons, per engine.
4 engines = 1,000,000 N.
A 747 has 5 landing gear trucks with 4 wheels each for a total of 20 wheels. Assuming a bearing on each end of the axle of each wheel, that?s 40 bearings (2 per wheel).
The rolling friction in each bearing would have to be 25,000 N (5,620 lbs) in order to keep the plane from moving forward.
I've done the work this far, now someone else compute the friction of a single wheel bearing with the weight of the 747, first at normal take off ground speed (180mph), then at twice the take off ground speed (360 mph). Then calculate what speed the wheels would have to be turning in order to generate the required 25,000 N of resistance in each wheel (far faster than possible due to the plane leaving the ground before that happens)
A 747 weights about 800,000 lbs, so each bearing is holding 20,000 lbs of the aircrafts weight (normal force in each bearing). Don't forget to relate wheel circumference when figuring revolutions per second in the bearing and divide by 2 bearings per wheel, one on each side of the wheel hub, etc.
I think you'll find that yes; bearing resistance is miniscule and CAN be safely ignored, even at wheel speeds impossible to reach due to the plane lifting off. FYI if the 747 begins lifting off at 180 mph the wheel speed will never exceed 360 mph on the conveyer before losing contact with the conveyer. Assume the bearings can't melt and lock up (if they did they wouldn't stop the plane, you would just have the sliding wheels dragging the plane now instead of the rolling bearings, still easily doable with the given thrust). If the bearings could go as fast as you wanted without siezing, you might compute that it would require a wheel speed of 6,000 mph or something to generate the required 25 KN of friction, however the wheels will never see beyond 360 mph before the plane loses contact with the conveyer.