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GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
rnbergren11-Apr-22 3:54
rnbergren11-Apr-22 3:54 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Ed Thompson 21011-Apr-22 4:28
Ed Thompson 21011-Apr-22 4:28 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Member 1315692711-Apr-22 5:12
Member 1315692711-Apr-22 5:12 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
lmoelleb11-Apr-22 4:55
lmoelleb11-Apr-22 4:55 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
jochance11-Apr-22 5:48
jochance11-Apr-22 5:48 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen11-Apr-22 11:52
trønderen11-Apr-22 11:52 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
jochance13-Apr-22 5:18
jochance13-Apr-22 5:18 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen13-Apr-22 8:39
trønderen13-Apr-22 8:39 
jochance wrote:
If the conveyor moved backwards as fast as the plane would otherwise be moving forwards there would be 0 horizontal movement, and so, 0 air flow to generate lift.
The only force from the conveyor belt on the plane to make it move backwards is the friction in the wheel bearings, which should be rather small. You have the same friction at a normal take of, so the engines are dimensioned to handle it. Compared to the force required to accelerate the plane to take off speed.

If the conveyor belt somehow has managed to get the plane up to take off speed in reverse, it must have taken a tremendously long time (and tremendously long conveyor belt) But once done, the turbines have no bigger problem pushing the plane up in speed on top of that conveyor belt. When they have done the same amount of work as is normally required to reach take off speed, the plane is standing still relative to the ground. Any further work done by the turbines will accelerate the plane relative to the ground, in the normal manner. The epsilon force from the conveyor belt, through the friction in the bearings, will not stop it.

So getting off the ground will take roughly twice as long (and twice as much fuel), but that doesn't prevent it from happening.
So, simplify it further and take the plane bit out of the equation a moment. Make it a car instead.
That makes a completely different situation. The wheels of a car are not free running, but tightly connected to the car engine. The acceleration of the car is caused by the force of the rotating wheels on the ground / belt. Take the belt away, leaving the car floating in free air, and it can neither speed up nor brake down. Suspend a (motorized) model plane in a string, and start the propellers / turbines: It will pull ahead.

So if the original question was talking about a car, then you would be right. But it didn't. That is the essential 'trick question' part: Most of us will think of the way a car accelerates (completely dependent on a solid grip on the road) and overlook that planes are completely different (totally independent of any grip on the runway) with respect to propulsion.
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
jochance22-Apr-22 9:40
jochance22-Apr-22 9:40 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Mateusz Jakub11-Apr-22 5:05
Mateusz Jakub11-Apr-22 5:05 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Martijn Smitshoek11-Apr-22 7:30
Martijn Smitshoek11-Apr-22 7:30 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Martijn Smitshoek11-Apr-22 7:34
Martijn Smitshoek11-Apr-22 7:34 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
harold aptroot11-Apr-22 8:02
harold aptroot11-Apr-22 8:02 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen11-Apr-22 11:46
trønderen11-Apr-22 11:46 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Martijn Smitshoek11-Apr-22 20:08
Martijn Smitshoek11-Apr-22 20:08 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen12-Apr-22 5:20
trønderen12-Apr-22 5:20 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Martijn Smitshoek12-Apr-22 20:22
Martijn Smitshoek12-Apr-22 20:22 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen13-Apr-22 9:01
trønderen13-Apr-22 9:01 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
Martijn Smitshoek13-Apr-22 10:00
Martijn Smitshoek13-Apr-22 10:00 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
0x01AA12-Apr-22 9:10
mve0x01AA12-Apr-22 9:10 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
JP Reyes11-Apr-22 8:45
JP Reyes11-Apr-22 8:45 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen11-Apr-22 11:14
trønderen11-Apr-22 11:14 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
JP Reyes11-Apr-22 11:46
JP Reyes11-Apr-22 11:46 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
trønderen11-Apr-22 12:37
trønderen11-Apr-22 12:37 
GeneralRe: Engineering question Pin
JP Reyes11-Apr-22 13:26
JP Reyes11-Apr-22 13:26 

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