Pirate04 said:
Complaint Investigator said:
Dad-O-Lot said:
Ag with kids said:
The best thing about helicopters is that they don't need conveyor belts in order to take off.
ah, but what if the helicopter was on a turntable that matched the rotary speed of the blades but in the opposite direction; would it take off? (probably not before the pilot threw up from dizziness)
Yes.
I wanted to nerd out on this but had a couple drinks and decided better not.
i did nerd out on this so i'll give it a try (disclaimer, all of my helicopter knowledge is from Wikipedia and all my physics knowledge is from A&M)
I'm going to go with no for a few reasons and will use a black hawk for the following assumptions
The first, assuming the axis of rotation in your turntable is centered under the main rotor, that puts the center of the tail rotor 388" out from the axis of rotation. The radius of the main rotor sits right at 322" so the tail of the aircraft is going to be moving faster than the tips of your rotors, and I don't imagine the tail of the helicopter was designed to withstand that kind of load. Assuming my googling is correct and the rpm of a black hawk rotor is 258 rpm, that puts the tips of the main rotor moving at 725 ft/s linear (they are designed to move through the air at this speed) and the tail of the craft moving at 880 ft/s or 20% faster. so my hypothesis is that this scenario will break the craft apart before it can ever take off.
second, and the more hypothetical answer, is no due to basic physics of how a helicopter gets lift. The rotor turns at a fixed rpm relative to the fuselage (in this case 258 rpm). the fuselage remains rotationally fixed in relation to the ground and air around it held so by the tail rotor and sometimes friction with the ground. with the fuselage held fixed, the rotor then is turning at 258 rpm relative to the ground and surrounding air as well, giving it the motion through the air it needs to create acceleration through the air. if we start turning the fuselage relative to the ground though, the rotor's rotation stays at 258 rpm relative to the fuselage so for every rpm i rotate the fuselage "backwards" i lose an rpm in the rotor relative to the ground. for instance if we rotate the helicopter 58 rpm in the negative direction, the rotor is now only moving at 200 rpm relative to the ground in the positive direction. we take this trend to the limit where the fuselage is turning at -258 rpm, the rotor relative to the fuselage will be turning +258 rpm, but that will put it at exactly 0 relative to the ground. so unless i am missing something in the mechanics of the rotor engine that would allow it to compensate for this negative rotation and essentially double the turnover rate of the blades to 516 rpm, the air craft will not be able to take off. in fact, in this perfect scenario, from standing on the ground off the turntable the blades would appear motionless and you could reach out and grab them. but only for a second because then you'd get smacked by the tail going 880 ft/s