There is nothing to withdraw.
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No, you made that statement. Back it up, or withdraw it.
There is nothing to withdraw.
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I think the cart will be too unstable with a flywheel. It will be on a knife edge. Some damping, in the form of drag, would probably be required to reduce the system Q. I don't claim that the momentum runs out, so the time is not important. The propellor could be replaced with simple drag generator, such as a paddle wheel.Humber's test: replace the propeller with a flywheel, set the cart on the treadmill with the treadmill surface running at 10 mph in the normal direction (front to back or right to left as seen in the small cart videos) and hold it in place until the flywheel gets up to speed, release the cart, run the test for at least one minute and record the result. Next, tilt the front of the treadmill up by 4.4 degrees and repeat the test. Finally, tilt the rear of the treadmill up 4.4 degrees and repeat the test.
If Humber is correct, the cart will remain in a balanced state on the treadmill belt in all three tests. If he's wrong, the cart will not be able to maintain a steady speed on the treadmill and will move off the treadmill belt to the front or the rear.
Perhaps a direct side by side test of the prop cart vs the humber (silent "b"?) cart would reduce any perceived or actual variances.
Maybe a direct measurement of the forces experienced by the two carts would help show any differences. A digital scale, some string, some pulleys and two weights could be used to show both fore and aft forces. Tie a string to the front of the cart, mount a pulley on the front of the treadmill and run the string over the pulley so that the end of the string is hanging, tie that end to the weight (500 grams or so) and set the weight on the scale. Do the same at the other end with half the weight but allow the second weight to hang free. Zero the digital scale. Any change in force will be seen on the scale as a change in weight.
Just a suggestion.
Or instead of one test, agree to one test each, in two stages. First stage, as specified, second stage with "corrections" as seen by the other side.
Can't see that working out well but I thought I'd toss it in.
That's okay, really. The thread has moved on, and I don't have the time to participate meaningfully in this thread as fast as it's moving now.Firstly, H'ethetheth, I apologise for not responding to your last post. I will do so a.s.a.p.
I know that's what you think, but proposing alternative tests that are demonstrably not equivalent to the road situation will not help, I assure you.On the first point, it is not the "vectorial equivalence" that is the problem. Of course, windtunnels working against a static vehicles exploit the same idea. The treadmill model is wrong, not the principle.
I agree that real wind is troublesome, but testing in a windtunnel is only meaningful with a very long test section and no treadmill.The wager that I have with Dan_O, is at least in my understanding, about a wind test. Platt's test is OK, if not a little inconvenient. If no other can be found, then that would seem to be the only choice.
The test I suggested is actually risky from my point of view. It would mean that the cart has already beaten the drag barrier, so that I gave that away in favour of "windspeed" launch. My tethered power test is no good. Platt's circular test is no good. Real wind is too uncontrolled...
Ah? Okay, that's strange. You can't just add random treadmills as a compromise. Nobody here wants treadmills as a matter of principle, it just eliminates the hassle of running after the cart.It would not normally be acceptable by anybody's standards to test with the treadmill. On the treadmill, the device under test is the cart, and not the simulator itself.
If TAD want to actually launch the vehicle into the wind at windspeed, then that may be OK, as long as some conditions are met.
The claim is not speed dependent, so any non-trivial speed should do. Perhaps the slowest speed at which the cart will function when on the treadmill? Pull it by wires. As long as it is set free, then the cart should be able to sustain itself. Again, perhaps risky for me if I overlook something. That was the general idea, but I included the treadmill as a compromise. It is not my model, and I don't think it is valid, so I let TAD decide on that matter.
Yeah, thanks Dan. Although I knew that already, someone mentioned the possibility of having humber banned from the thread. I didn't think that was likely to be in the rules, but would at least have the advantage of solving the whole problem at a stroke. I've had myself on ignore for ages.The 'ignore' function is your friend. Click on the trolls name in a post and select "Add to your ignore list". To make the ignore complete, also edit the options in your control panel and set "Hide ignored posts" to yes. Once you have done this, you won't be able to read or respond to the troll without first reversing the steps taken.
Unfortunately, if anyone does respond to the troll you will still see the quoted troll text. Sometimes it is necessary to put the troll feeders on ignore too.
Humber thinks (or pretends to think) that a cart will go faster with a brake, since that's all the prop is doing, balancing the input force of the treadmill. Wrapping a rag round the shaft would do. LOLYou continue to make up your own reality. You can't do the math. You can't even keep your vectors pointing in the right direction.
Of course you do. Now that you have pushed your mechanically infantile suggestion enough that people are threatening to actually test it, suddenly you give us the headsup that it would be too unstable. Maybe it will cause a black hole and precipitate the end of the world.I think the cart will be too unstable with a flywheel.
Pity the same isn't true for human brains. What is this, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs?We can add some holes so it will whistle while it works.
I think there is only one result that would take him down... and that is none of us responding to his trolling (and therefore ruining) of this thread.
Now that you have pushed your mechanically infantile suggestion enough that people are threatening to actually test it, suddenly you give us the headsup that it would be too unstable. Maybe it will cause a black hole and precipitate the end of the world.
Moved on?. I do not think that is has changed at all. There are several errors in the model. I need not stick to TAD's rules to expose them. One of the many failures that is not directly "equivalence" related, is the logic of its derivation. This results in and ever-so-narrow operating range, that indicates one specific state, and nothing else. That is why is is so "difficult" to test.That's okay, really. The thread has moved on, and I don't have the time to participate meaningfully in this thread as fast as it's moving now.
A stepping stone, perhaps. I can work to define the boundaries by the process of elimination, as by direct proposal.I know that's what you think, but proposing alternative tests that are demonstrably not equivalent to the road situation will not help, I assure you.
Is proof troublesome? Ideas are commonplace. There are lots of those with theories, "concepts"and designs that hope someone else will verify for them. They forget that there are others with ideas, that have proof and supporting secondary evidence, because they are important to them, and not just a means of display. People such as Ynot.I agree that real wind is troublesome, but testing in a windtunnel is only meaningful with a very long test section and no treadmill.
No, the treadmill AND the cart are the model. They are not independent.Ah? Okay, that's strange. You can't just add random treadmills as a compromise. Nobody here wants treadmills as a matter of principle, it just eliminates the hassle of running after the cart.
That's a classic John. I thought I was going to blow milk out my nose while eating breakfast and reading that.
There's always *some* reason that the test can't be defined let alone performed -- but of course I need to tell him *how* I'm going to perform the test before he will tell me what the test is.
JB
Pity the same isn't true for human brains. What is this, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs?
Thanks, JB. We aim to choke.That's a classic John. I thought I was going to blow milk out my nose while eating breakfast and reading that.
There's always *some* reason that the test can't be defined let alone performed -- but of course I need to tell him *how* I'm going to perform the test before he will tell me what the test is.
JB
Thanks, JB. We aim to choke.
Yeah, good luck implementing that test of humber's that demonstrates you've been wrong all along. Take special care with the bias of the flywheels and positioning of the bits of rag. I'm sure he'll stand over you pointing out your mistakes as you go along.
Humber thinks (or pretends to think) that a cart will go faster with a brake, since that's all the prop is doing, balancing the input force of the treadmill. Wrapping a rag round the shaft would do. LOL
That was Mender's suggestion as to what I might try. It could be that, it is very simple and illustrative. A disk that creates drag but no thrust, would work quite nicely.
I see - they're always in balance. How odd... would they remain in balance if I aimed the propeller up? What if I applied a resistive brake to the wheels - will the cart remain stationary and its wheels spin at the same rate in that case too?humber said:The torque is the tiny difference between the drive from the wheels and the equal and opposite reaction from the propellor*. In an ideal world, these forces would be in balance, resulting in zero torque. It is fundamentally incapable of doing any work. Other ratios are possible, but that simply means that the propellor turns at a different speed in order to create the same result of standing still.
So you think if I aim the propeller straight up the cart will remain motionless on the belt. I suggest you think again, and if you find that difficult, imagine the propeller is encased in a container full of thick viscous oil. If there is any resistance in the propeller - which there always will be in still air unless it's not rotating - there is a torque on the wheels. It's precisely like braking a car.humber said:Changing the orientation of the propellor, will simply change the amount of drag, and therefore the amount of energy absorbed from the belt.
The two forces will always be in balance, not only because of that law, but that the sum of the two forces is that derived form the belt.
I'm having trouble with your wording here, but it appears you're just rephrasing the statement that the treadmill and the road are not equivalent. This is incorrect, no matter how you rephrase it. I hope to demonstrate that below.A propellor rotating at 200rpm in wind while driving a cart, is not the same as a propellor being driven to the same speed in still air from the wheels
No. The prop accelerates air backward relative to the cart both outside as well as on the treadmill. In fact, seeing how in both cases the cart has a very low velocity relative to the surrounding air, the amount of momentum imparted to the air will be very similar.One has a load, the other not. Propellors need a mass load to transfer energy. They are transducers, converting a sea of momentum into torque. There is none of that to transduce when on the treadmill, so the propellor spins aimlessly about in a netherworld of stray friction.
I'll try to put this to you as clearly I can before giving up. That is, I will have to stop discussing this if you cannot point out the errors in the analysis below, because I can't really explain this any other way.The traveling is an artifact of that flaw. Focusing on that, is misdirection to cover up the fact that there is no wind, no force, no kinetic energy and no velocity normally associated with a vehicle traveling at 10kph. No. A hitting B is not the same as B hitting A, in this case.
(snipped word salad with innumerable errors and misconceptions)
If you still believe that there is an extremely easy test spork and co. could do: replace the propeller with a brake, or just orient the propeller the other way. Hell, just put the cart on the treadmill facing backwards.
The debate with Humber is a dead end, maybe you guys could get back to designing and implementing a more definitive test.
Since treadmills are out, ... <snip>
The treadmill was a good idea to show the operation of the cart in the most controlled circumstance.
Of course, if you can't see the equivalency of a cart on a treadmill and a cart being pushed by the wind down the road, it only provides more confusion.
...We can block the variation by putting a moving shield around the cart that is moving at the average speed of the wind. The only wind inside the shield will be the average wind speed.
The cart will create air circulation within the shielded zone. To minimize the effect of these induced circulations, that shielded area should be large in comparison to the cart. For a cart the size of Spork's small cart, a shield the size of a room would be appropriate.
A work platform could be extended at the base of the shield up to the area just around the cart. To make access to the cart easier, a raised section of artificial road could be constructed above the shield platform and geared so that the top surface is stationary relative to the road.
The cart can be tested on this raised section in the comfort and controlled environment of the shield...
If you still believe that there is an extremely easy test spork and co. could do...
The debate with Humber is a dead end...