Originally posted by Jeff Smith
I spoke with 1 of our flight test engineers this morning before I left work. His thoughts were the aircraft cannot fly. He pointed out something we had not looked at. With the aircraft not being able to develop any ground speed there would not be enough airflow over the aircraft control surfaces (Flaps) to be able to get the aircraft up into the air....
I spoke with 1 of our flight test engineers this morning before I left work. His thoughts were the aircraft cannot fly. He pointed out something we had not looked at. With the aircraft not being able to develop any ground speed there would not be enough airflow over the aircraft control surfaces (Flaps) to be able to get the aircraft up into the air....
The mistake is equating ground speed with air speed or implying that the conveyor somehow affects the air speed. On a normal runway, in dead calm air, they are equal. In this artificial scenario ground speed is not air speed. They happen to be opposite. But ground speed doesn't matter since the ground exerts no drag force on the aircraft.
It doesn't matter that the ground is moving backward or forward, fast or slow, tracking the plane or moving randomly. It doesn't matter at all. It simply has no effect on the motion of the airframe. All of the airframe motion is due to propulsion thrust.
PC.
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