rubmeister100 said:
tboy my friend, you should ahve stuck to our oath!.
The treadmill/conveyor belt spinning the freewheeling landing gear wheels has almost NO effect on the airspeed seen by the wings. I'd say NONE but that would not be precisely correct.
The hard thing for folks to get their heads around is their car oriented idea that the plane moves forward as a result of wheels imparting the forward motion.
Airplanes are moved forward by thrust provided by the propellors/jet engine. The propellor nor the wings don't know or care if the plane is taking off on ice, a flowing river, or a conveyor belt.
ice
Ah, but the difference between those surfaces you mentioned and a treadmill is the fact that those surfaces are not exerting a backward force on the airframe. They are stationary.
As the example stated the treadmill/converyor belt would exert an equal and opposite action to counteract the thrust of the engines in order to keep the plane stationary.
If it was unpowered and freewheeling then the plane would take off as normal and may even get airborne quicker due to the reduced drag of the landing gear, bearings, tire friction etc.
Sorry rub, you know I respect you and all but the drag of the landing gear has a tremendous effect on how quickly or how much thrust it takes a plane to achieve take off (or air) speed. You see, there is resistance in the bearings, and especially the tire contact with the runway. Hence why the rolling resistance of freight cars on railway track is so little. The contact patch is about the size of a dime and you have two extremely hard surfaces.
Ever watch a seaplane take off from water? It takes forever for it to achieve sufficient speed to achieve lift that is due to the tremendous resistance of the water. Put that same plane on skiis and it takes off in half the distance......
BTW: a great example of the resistance of the landing gear is demonstrated everytime a plane lands: you can tell by the smoke coming off the tires as it touches down. if there was no resistance the tires would immediately match the speed of the passing runway and there'd be no smoke....(think of a kick turn while rollerblading, there is little mass in the wheels so they can pretty much immediately change directions with little effort).
I just remembered something else: I watched a lot of the shows on the development of the new airbus and if memory serves, it took a 30,000 hp motor, 5 minutes to get the wheels up to speed during the landing gear test (where they slammed the gear down on a stationary wheel after achieve max rotation to test the durability of the tires, struts, components). Of it took that long to spin 2 of the 20 odd tires, that's a lot of resistance no?