Roz-SRT said:. .
Think of it like this. . . You're standing on a treadmill wearing some roller skates and you're holding onto a rope that another person is holding onto in front of the treadmill. Turn the treadmill on and the belt starts to move. Do you actually move? No. . .
Now turn the treadmill on full speed . . Have the other person reel in the rope, do you move forward? Yes. . . Does that other person have to pull harder on the rope to get you to move forward due to the treadmill rotating at a high rate of speed? I highly doubt it. . .
This idea does not work. Yes you would move forward. But with the airplane problem you don't have an external source pulling the rope. The person on the treadmill is the plane. The rope is the thrust (engines). Just holding onto the rope allows the person to over come the movement of the treadmill. That is thrust and drag being equal. Now if you have a friend pull the rope then the person would move forward. But what does the pulling of the rope equate too? Nothing, it is an external factor.
Roz-SRT said:The wheel speed has NOTHING to do with this equation.The wheels are free spinning.
They kind of do. The wheel speed might be 1000 knots, but if the airplane speed is zero, due to thrust being equal to drag then there is no lift being generated. I might get up to 100 mph on a dyno, but if a cop shot me with his radar then what would it show? Zero because the car is not actually moving, only the wheels. The airplane is not moving, only the wheels. The airplane can only move if the thrust from the engines can propel the airplane at a speed faster then the moving runway. Even then the thrust has to be enough to overcome the moving runway and get the airplane moving fast enough to get wind over the wind foils to create lift.
If you are running on a treadmill while holding a paper airplane and you just release the airplane, will it fly? No, unless there is a fan generating wind for lift or you push the plane forward with your arm as you release it. But then you added extra thrust (your arm). The engine (your legs) equaled the drag (treadmill) which generated zero lift.