What would we be if we were both mothers also? :wacko:So really what you're saying is that your mother and my mother are both mothers therefore we could be brothers, correct? :dunno:
We've got to be careful to define "stationary". If the airplane moves at the same speed of what it's sitting on, this is not stationary, right? Let's call this "staying still on the moving surface".I think his point is that if the wheels are allowed to move freely and the conveyor starts to move but no force is applied to the plane via the engines the wheels should turn, but the plane should remain stationary despite what the conveyor is doing. Newtons first law of motion, a body will stay at rest unless a force acts upon it. Since the wheels rotate freely, no force should be transfered to the body of the plane, the plane shouldn't move and the conveyor will just cause the wheels to role.
Sorry about that. i did a quick cut/paste. it had to do with some earlier comments the OP had made.Wait a second. Where does Monty Hall fit into all this? Now there's a problem on which you will never get agreement.
There's nothing wrong with what you posted. My comment was supposed to be an unrelated joke. As it turns out, it was unrelated but not much of a joke. It refers to another old riddle that had a rather lengthy argument thread. Lucky I have my day job for now.Sorry about that. i did a quick cut/paste. it had to do with some earlier comments the OP had made.
Ha! Is the model airplane on a treadmill the basis for the problem statement?
We can see it does not take off from the treadmill, but it only moves forward with no flight.
Can someone post the original riddle, so we can clarify the infinite conveyor.
Yes. It took flight. Satisfied?Well, did it take flight? I have agreed all along it would move forward.
Now, let's seperate theory from reality.
I don't know what you're talking about with a video. Where do I say I watched a video? Or are you talking to someboy else. I actually put a model plane with a rubber band prop on an exercise treadmill and guess what, it took off. And it was going a hell of a lot slower than the treadmill.What video did you watch? The model plane was supported on a string.
I just want a clarification on the original problem, or maybe I should just wait on the MB episode.
You better just hold the controls straight and steady.
http://meignorant.com/2posts/Fly-NotFly.gif
Despite the lengthy statistical arguments (which are likely valid) I still believe it's a 50/50 chance. :smileyballs:^^^ Wait a min ... I thought we all agreed (even I rescinded previous statements) that it was better to SWITCH than stay.
Right?
JR
You're not following the rules - only one new fact at a time.Hey Sapper,I did not force you to look at this thread again, so no reason to get ill. You contradict yourself by saying it does not matter how short the conveyor is, but add that it needs to be long enough to obtain critical velocity. If we can agree that the length does matter, I will agree that the plane will fly and let it rest.
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