No. The fact that it is not the same difference is essential to the function of the device. This is what you have not understood yet.
If there is a difference there is usable power, period. Even if the difference isn't fully maintained.
No, not at all. The difference is directly dependent on the speed of the vehicle. It has nothing to do with whether the craft is built properly or shoddily. It is maintained, but not constant.
Again you have admitted the difference is maintained whether constant or not. If the is a difference there is usable power.
Also, I'm not saying that it doesn't work. It works, but not the way you think it works.
Do you have any idea how many different ways you can describe the same thing and they all be equally valid? There are at least 3 different formulation of thermodynamics alone that are equally as valid.
Which is why I said to be careful with signs and reference frames. I said that for a reason. Listen well: when the propeller pushes the air backward with respect to the device, the air is moving forward with respect to the ground. Try to read again what I have written, and this time pay extra attention to signs and reference frames.
Ok, that's actually a perfectly valid statement but in what way does it relate to the argument I made? You didn't even relate it to any specific claim.
With respect to the device, yes. With respect to the ground, no. The air pushed back is moving in the opposite direction of the air wrt device, and in the same direction as the air wrt ground.
This was in response to me saying:
"When the craft first takes off the prop is moving air in the opposite direction of the wind."
When the craft first takes off wrt the ground and wrt the device is the same thing. Remember this, the speed of the craft is almost but not quiet zero here. Look at the diagram:
<-- Craft moves to the left
You say:
1) The air pushed back is moving in the opposite direction of the air wrt device.
2) The air pushed back is the same direction as the air wrt ground.
Number 2 is dead wrong. It will be right once the craft exceeds the ground air speed but the single sentence you quoted and responded to specifically labeled it, "when the craft first takes off".
If you don't realize this, then you don't understand how the device works.
You do of course now realize that the statement you want me to realize as the truth is dead wrong. If not reread my response one quote up with the diagram.
You can't see something very crucial in the video: the speed at which the propeller moves the air backwards, wrt device. This is less than the speed of the vehicle wrt ground. Which is what makes the air moving through the propeller move forward wrt ground.
Uugh....
At this moment, I'm afraid, you're missing the correct understanding of how the device works. This needs to be remedied in order to proceed. I would suggest that you put the propeller version aside for now, and concentrate on the much simpler version of the device, the illustration of which was kindly provided by Spork
here.
Trying to say that is how the original craft works is like drawing a paddleboat and saying that is how a sailboat works. If these things are equivalent then wouldn't you say a propeller and a windmill are equivalent? Why the do propellers often get over 90% efficiency when a windmill is limited to less than 59% efficiency?
Answer these questions: if there were no friction and no drag (except air pushing on the blades), would the device accelerate? If yes, would the device accelerate indefinitely? If no, what would the top speed be? And why?
That's not even a question. Can air push on both sides of the blade? Apparently not sense there is no drag. Except you seem to assume the blade has drag because you are baiting me with indefinite acceleration. Do you realize that the speed of air has little to do with the speed of air molecules except statistically? No friction? Never mind, too messy. Didn't you mean to start this paragraph with, "Riddle me this"? This makes as much sense as asking what would happen if an unstoppable object hit an immovable object. No matter whether I get it right or wrong in your imagination you would then claim it means something real. Get real!!!
After you understand how the simple version works, we can move back to the propeller version.
So I guess I need to figure out what really would happen when an unstoppable object hit an immovable object. Then I could be as smart as you...
Don't debate with me anymore..