A jet plane on a large treadmill
Quote:
Originally Posted by
AaronWright
The "2016" version has been around since at least 2005, see my previous link to The Straight Dope. I think you're wrong about the wheel speed matching version, for starters the wheels on a plane can't roll unless it moves forward or the wheels are powered like a car. I would guess that in the ground speed matching version the tread mill would be going faster than in the wheel speed matching version.
Yeah, instantaneous response doesn't typically exist (quantum physics?) in the real world, and the illogic of that has me hung up too. That said, If the wheels DO spin, they're going to spin really fast unless they're wicked heavy (in which case they'll still soon be spinning really fast). In either case, it's kind of like inadvertently writing an infinite loop in programming code. It doesn't make sense in a finite world.
In other news, nothing draws a derisive sigh quite like me responding to my wife asking what I'm typing away at on the computer with "I'm posting on TGR about the airplane on the treadmill."
A jet plane on a large treadmill
The funny part about this is you could probably give this problem to a couple upper classmen engineering students and they could have it worked out in a week. It would make a good take home test.
This is really tempting to try and do out. A mechanical background would be more helpful though.
http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...3e67ab6a0a.jpg