Perfect. I take back my criticism of the substance of your argument.
In fact, I explained with great detail why that is. You just didn't understand my explanation. Perhaps I didn't explain it clearly enough.
I'll let that slide sense the substance in this post is perfect. It even makes the source of our disagreement crystal clear and also makes your original claim very understandable. Nobody could ask for more.
Let me try again. The craft is travelling right to left, wrt ground, at 4 mph. The wind is going right to left, wrt ground, at 8 mph (and also right to left, wrt craft, at 4 mph). The prop blows the air left to right wrt the craft, at 2 mph.
I do see how you got got your numbers now and why. I qualified my original claim you objected to with, "When the craft first takes off" for a reason. In the first video 4 mph is most of the ground wind speed and certainly can't be defined as "when the craft first takes off". By arbitrarily picking the prop wind speed at some arbitrary craft speed (such as 2 mph when the craft is at 4 mph) you can point the prop wind speed either direction you want wrt ground. Your chosen numbers would give a prop wind speed of 2 mph wrt the ground in the same direction as the craft.
If craft speed is 4 mph (far too fast to be when the craft first takes off) then:
From above wrt the ground (ground= 0mph wrt the ground).
Definitions:
Right to left is -mph wrt the ground.
Left to right is +mph wrt the ground.
A switch from + to - or - to + is a direction reversal wrt ground.
Sentence by sentence in the same order you stated above.
Craft = -4 mph wrt ground, right to left.
Wind = +8 mph wrt ground, left to right.
Prop air = +2 wrt craft but craft = -1 wrt ground therefore:
Prop air wrt ground = -4+2 = -2 mph wrt ground (same direction as as craft wrt ground).
What happens when we use these same numbers except with a craft speed much closer to "
when the craft first takes off" as I specified, such as 1 mph wrt ground. Now the prop air speed wrt ground is 1 mph opposite the direction of the craft.
Craft = -1 mph wrt ground, right to left.
Wind = +8 mph wrt ground, left to right.
Prop air = +2 wrt craft but craft = -1 wrt ground therefore:
Prop air wrt ground = -1+2 = +1 mph wrt ground.
This is exactly why I specified "
when the craft first takes off" in the quote of mine you chose to take issue with. To see it in context here is where you objected:
When the craft first takes off the prop is moving air in the opposite direction of the wind.
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.
If you don't realize this, then you don't understand how the device works.
What direction is the air blown by the propeller travelling, wrt ground? In the same direction as the air, or the opposite direction of the air?
When the craft first takes off it is in the opposite direction of the wind, as I originally stated and will show why. Now since gearing can be set so that either one of us can be right about the craft who is right concerning the craft given sporks specifications? We know that the gear ratio is 1 to 1 in rpm. So this same question becomes how does a propeller turning the same rpm as the wheels blow air faster than the wheels are moving the craft?
This one is easy. The prop has a much larger radius than the wheels. This means the tips of the prop has to have a higher angular velocity than the edges of the wheels on the road, even at the same rpm. Any part of the prop with a greater radius of the wheels must eject air faster than the wheels are moving the craft. My statement therefore stands.
Does this make statement number 2 true, or false?
Given the design specifications of the craft statement number 2 remains false. Of course you could change sporks specifications (gear ratio, wheel size, prop pitch, etc.) to make it true.
Does this clarify what I mean? If not, what is still unclear to you?
Yes, perfectly. I even understand now how you did the vectors to reasonably lead you to that claim.
ETA: I'm sorry, I mistyped one of the directions when I was typing this post. The error is now corrected. If you have read it before, please read the post again.
Not a problem. The above issue with gearing ratio changing the physics of the crafts operation is an excellent example of why "idealized" models are so often useless. I try real hard to qualify my statements for the specific characteristics of the real model under actual operational conditions. It is impossible to avoid all mistakes.