H'ethetheth
fishy rocket scientist
Stop right there!! This is not the case! The propeller is mounted exactly as it is designed to spin. The whole thing wouldn't function half as well if not. This is also exactly the unintuitive part (at least to me)....I have earlier described the treadmills act, but perhaps this is clearer.
Replace the propeller with a tangential impeller, (like a waterwheel
with end-plates, such that it cannot generate lateral forces).
If you spin such a device in the hand, you will feel the opposing drag of the air.
Put this on the cart, and spin the wheel clockwise. The 'prop' will rotate
clockwise, and you will feel the opposing drag.
Turn the wheel CCW, and you will also feel opposing drag.
The cart is trapped in this force 'well'. I cannot so eadily move forward or backwards, so its natural tendency when on the belt, is to stay where it is.
The prop and the drive shaft oppose each other, resulting in an absolute torque that is the drag of the prop at that particular angular velocity, and a differential (driving) force of next to zero.
( Assuming there is adequate friction with the belt to transmit that absolute torque)
The real propeller is not symmetrical with respect to drag, though it is turned against its natural bias, so that drag will be dominant. The 'thrust' component will be smaller, as the propeller is not designed to spin in that direction,...
It is true that at low speeds (relative to the wind speed), the local angle of attack of the propeller blades is very high, but it is this drag that actually aids the acceleration to wind speed. As it accelerates the torque on the propeller from the wheels provides thrust, which is a positive feedback to the acceleration. This acceleration only disappears at some point above wind speed. It is essential that the prop spins in the direction it was designed to spin.
Well, I hope that the two paragraphs above will give you some pause to think. You are working from an incorrect hypothesis of how all the parts interact, and working from an incorrect hypothesis will generally not yield correct results. If you have questions about this, do ask.ETA:
To make things clear, H'ethethet, I do not say that vehicles cannot travel faster than the wind, but:
1. A direct propulsion device like this cart, no
2. I have not seem proof that it can, therefore I stick to 1.
3. The treadmill says nothing about the carts capacities, other than the wheels spin
I had a lot more, but it's a bit pointless if we're not discussing the same machine.
Two things though:
I apologize for appealing to my authority. I admit that that is bad form. However, you have to realize that I approached this cart from a skeptical perspective as well as you do, mostly because of the "over-unity" tag. I subsequently figured out that I had made a false supposition about the working principles of the cart. When I realised this, it still took me about an hour to figure out how it actually does work. Now, I do not pretend to be infallible, but the operating principles aren't that complicated; they are just unintuitive.
Secondly, you are right that I am aware of the importance of validation and testing. However, I think that you are really showing spork c.s. too little respect for all of the experiments they have done to demonstrate just how the cart works. Their films are what made me realize I had made false suppositions about the cart.
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