Broomstick wrote:What airplane wheels are we talking about? Those on a 747? An F-16? A Piper Cub?
Some of the smaller airplanes really don't have very much power available and there isn't much available to overcome friction.
I can see where someone used to the effects of ground surface on take-off performance might react to the conveyor belt idea with the notion that it might impede acceleration enough to prevent flight. Hard surface vs. grass vs. slush/snow/ice all have a noticable effect on the acceleration and take-off distance required of any airplane.
That's because you're no longer dealing with normal rolling friction on a surface like snow-covered grass; you have to actually push through material. On a conveyor belt, this would not apply; the belt would not have to rotate too many times to shake off whatever junk is on it.
Friction is a factor when the wheels on are the ground. That's why on rough fields - nonpaved, grass, etc. - you pull the airplane up off the ground before you achieve normal flying speed (actually, as soon as you can get it and keep it off the surface) and finish the acceleration and take-off in ground effect. Because you accelerate so much better in the air vs. on the ground (any ground).
Friction is only a factor if the wheels are locked. Otherwise you have bearings in the wheels which are designed to reduce friction. And in this hypothetical scenario, the plane is attempting to take off, so there is no reason why the wheels would be locked.
So the key becomes the friction between the wheels and the belt. If it's closer to that of wheels on pavement yeah, the airplane will fly. If it's closer to that of tall, wet grass or sand then it's possible the airplane won't fly.
I don't see how a conveyor belt is going to approximate the consistency of sand or a muddy grass field.
As for rolling resistance vs. full thrust - again, that varies with the airplane. There are airplanes where, at full thrust, you can't rely on the brakes to hold it in place. On a slick surface - such as slush - you can lock the wheels with the brakes and the airplane just ignores it and will happily wear a flat spot into the wheel as the engine drags the machine along the ground. On the other hand, deep grass can impede forward motion sufficiently to prevent take-off even without a conveyor belt involved.
Sorry, by "rolling resistance" I meant the friction of the free-rolling wheel bearing, not the friction between a locked wheel and the ground.
Airplanes are different than cars because the car relies on contact with the ground to move, but the airplane relies on contact with the air. But contact with the ground still counts. Friction is friction. The only question is how much friction and what effect does it have on acceleration.
So, Wong, I'm just a pilot - you're the engineer. Assuming normal tire rubber for the airplane, what's the conveyor belt made of and what's the friction between it and the wheels?
The friction coefficient between the conveyor belt and the wheels could be as high as you like and it wouldn't matter if the brakes aren't on.