5-90
NAXJA Forum User
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Airplane lift depends on airspeed, not groundspeed. So, you can put it on a treadmill and spin the wheels all you want - if forward airspeed is zero - or below takeoff speed, it's not going anywhere. That's why you can generate lift in a wind tunnel without forward motion.
I hadn't read through the whole thread, but here's the question I consider key - will the wheels/airframe be powered, or will the treadmill be spinning the wheels? If the treadmill is going to spin the wheels, forward airspeed will be zero (or whatever ambient wind is happening,) and no lift will be generated.
The reason that aircraft take off "into the wind" is simple - they get to combine the speed of the wind with the speed generated by thrust - it's additive - and that allows them to take off at a lower ground speed and using a bit less power. If they were to take off "with the wind," it would take more power and fuel to do so. That's why major commercial airports have so many runways - it allows them to work with the weather and prevailing ground wind patterns. Once they're off the ground, friction is reduced (I don't care how good your bearings are - put 50 or 60 tonnes on them, and you're going to get friction) and it's easier to use thrust to generate airspeed.
Say you've got a light airframe that has a takeoff speed of 60knots, and a 10-knot wind aligned right along your main runway. If you take off facing into the wind, you actually get sufficient lift at 50 knots ground speed (you'll show an "indicated airspeed of 60 knots) and you'll take off. Take off with the wind blowing into your back, and you'll actually have to do 70 knots ground speed (same 60 KIAS) to get lift to get off the ground - the airspeed is the same, but the ground speed will differ by twenty knots. That can be quite a bit, and mean shorter range due to extra fuel consumption (and longer takeoff distance as well.)
The fuel and power problems are magnified when you've got 50 or 60 tonnes - vice 2000-3000 pounds - to get off the ground.
So, I don't know enough to give a definitive answer - but I can say with some certainty that, if the wheels are going to be driven by the treadmill (and not by engine thrust,) that plane isn't going anywhere.
I hadn't read through the whole thread, but here's the question I consider key - will the wheels/airframe be powered, or will the treadmill be spinning the wheels? If the treadmill is going to spin the wheels, forward airspeed will be zero (or whatever ambient wind is happening,) and no lift will be generated.
The reason that aircraft take off "into the wind" is simple - they get to combine the speed of the wind with the speed generated by thrust - it's additive - and that allows them to take off at a lower ground speed and using a bit less power. If they were to take off "with the wind," it would take more power and fuel to do so. That's why major commercial airports have so many runways - it allows them to work with the weather and prevailing ground wind patterns. Once they're off the ground, friction is reduced (I don't care how good your bearings are - put 50 or 60 tonnes on them, and you're going to get friction) and it's easier to use thrust to generate airspeed.
Say you've got a light airframe that has a takeoff speed of 60knots, and a 10-knot wind aligned right along your main runway. If you take off facing into the wind, you actually get sufficient lift at 50 knots ground speed (you'll show an "indicated airspeed of 60 knots) and you'll take off. Take off with the wind blowing into your back, and you'll actually have to do 70 knots ground speed (same 60 KIAS) to get lift to get off the ground - the airspeed is the same, but the ground speed will differ by twenty knots. That can be quite a bit, and mean shorter range due to extra fuel consumption (and longer takeoff distance as well.)
The fuel and power problems are magnified when you've got 50 or 60 tonnes - vice 2000-3000 pounds - to get off the ground.
So, I don't know enough to give a definitive answer - but I can say with some certainty that, if the wheels are going to be driven by the treadmill (and not by engine thrust,) that plane isn't going anywhere.