You think know a lot about what you have not seen. I observed it out of interest. I worked in an orchard after school. I have curiosity.
Unfortunately, not the knowledge or intelligence to correctly interpret what you have seen.
For cleanliness, the floor of the belt is flat stainless steel. Alos, if rolled is will resume its activity elsewhere.
Consistent either with an inclined belt or a weight induced sag in the belt.
The belt is not inclined.
You checked that with a level? It wouldn't take much slope to cause that effect.
They will do this for a long time, so that accretion rings form The orange is not a unique case, in fact quite common. Apples too. All the rest, wrong, wrong, wrong.
Okay, as I'm sure everybody but Humber understands, the oranges, apples, cherries are not going to remain stationary on the belt for more than a few seconds, unless some force is keeping them there. The most likely force is gravity, due either to an inclined belt or a weight induced sag in the belt.
Cherries can climb perhaps a foot up an apparently smooth and motionless inclined plane. How do you think they do that? Oh, I forgot.
Well either the cherries were already in motion when they started up that inclined plane and they rolled up on momentum, or there were some
really good drugs being used in that orchard, which, now that I think about it, would explain a whole lot.
No belt sag required. Wow, he almost thought it...low resistance.
Actually, that would have to zero resistance. Possible only in the Humberverse.
though it does show that you are willing to accept any thing that stays on the belt as being windspeed. Can I sell you som real estate? You make up both our minds, OK? You build one, but mind the sharps.
This is so incoherent I won't even attempt to refute it. It's self refuting.
Risible. You are using "feels like" as an instrument. Folk physics. (51%, remember). Wow! tragic error.
Yes. Yours.
It's the fact that the forces are not only equal but opposite, but maximised.
Only in the Humberverse.
Forces are maximised not minimised at terminal velocity. I put a gauge in the skates, so that you wouldn't fall into your own trap. Oh, boy, Spork has it easy!
Repeat that as many times as you like. It's still wrong.
Actually they are roller skates, ( hence wheels) but even so, why does the skater not continue to accelerate?
Well, you didn't specify in your earlier post, and I assumed ice skates. It really doesn't matter.
The skater doesn't continue to accelerate because when the parachute approaches wind speed, the force derived from the wind is reduced until it matches the friction of the skates.
Another schoolboy error. Make it an aircraft. Make it a car....
Yes, let's make it something completely different and pretend it's the same thing. However, if the airplane, car, horse or whatever is moving at a constant speed, the force will still
decrease when the skater is close to the speed of the towing vehicle. If you can't understand this. You're hopeless. But we already know that.
And no, parachutes do not behave like that. They can be designed to be like a 'constant' force or 'constant' velocity.
Parachutes are magic in the Humberverse.
You say, that forces are mimimum at terminal velocity. All your arguments are either based upon that false assumption, or other matters equally so.
Your alleged refutation of the equivalence of the treadmill and the "real world" rests on you incorrect assumption that the forces are mazimized at "terminal velocity" in the "real world" but not on the treadmill. Okay, Humber, the skates have very low friction. Why doesn't the skater continue to accelerate when the parachute is close to wind speed. Better, since you think parachutes are magic, make it a sail. I'm waiting. I'm sure it will be outrageously funny.
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QED. You have embarrassed yourself. But you must enjoy it, because you keep doing it.