Humber, this is getting ridiculous.
The cart does not claim to do anything that is 'outside of what is currently understood to be possible'. It uses the wind to travel at a speed that is faster than the wind itself. Sailboats, windmill vanes, and other things have been doing this for some time.
Yes, this appears to be the first device that can outrun the wind, straight downwind. And, I'll admit that I thought it was some kind of trickery when I started reading the OP. But, even I (who is an not expert on anything) can grasp the concept. I can understand that it's not a question about whether the idea can overcome the forces against it (friction), but understand that the question is "What is the minimum wind speed you'd need to make it work?" Is 5 mph enough? Or would 100 mph be needed? Of course, me not being the skeptic that you are, I take the videos on the treadmill to be demonstrations that normal wind speeds will suffice.
Humber, I'd like to know if you believe it's possible to construct a device that will travel directly into the wind, using only the wind as power?
It is becoming ridiculous, because I still find that I am being held to things that I never actually said, while the things I have said, are ignored.
1. I do not say anything is faked
2. The cart in the wind may
look fast, but is it? How fast would a cart without gearing, or with sail appear to move? The wind and cart speeds are unknown. The wind is invisible, so I have no idea how fast it is local to the cart. Not evidence that it isn't traveling at windspeed, but also not evidence that it is. I am surprised that so much is taken at face value. Is that overly skeptical of me?
3. I think that to reach windspeed directly down wind, and exceed the normally expected drag barrier, would require more energy than is available to the propeller. No additional energy is available from the ground.
4. Movement up the treadmill is explicable. I understand the idea of "equivalence" that supports the treadmill, and the way that the belt is used to model the wind. The motor is the power source, and a model of the same from the wind. I disagree that the treadmill/cart is the equivalent of a cart in wind.
I am not sure what you mean when you mention the different speeds, Screenshot. The absolute speed is not important. The cart will always achieve a terminal velocity less than the wind. Wind is nebulous, so lets say a constant velocity airflow. The cart cannot extract enough energy from the airflow, to drive it to the same velocity. I am aware of the ground energy idea, but say that is notional.
Boats don't fly, and sailboats are not carts. There are all manner of ways in which a sailboat may beat the wind. They are complete systems that may change their shape, and be steered by intelligence to take maximum advantage of the available resources. Under these conditions, I think that I may need to redefine windspeed, and start looking at the energy budget of the boat locally to it, rather than at some remote point.
I can turn a cat into I rat, if I look for the similarities, and ignore the differences. All manner of contraptions, all unproven, are used to support the cart, yet there is still something new?
I doubt that a simple direct wind craft can even reach windspeed. The drag will win. "A device", certainly.
As I have said, I plan to put this all together in one post. I do have good reasons. I do understand what I am being told.