I think it is hilarious that people get heated debating this subject. I voted no, maybe my understanding of the principles of flight are off but I thought it happened because of the following:
Lift occurs because the air moving under the wing is travelling faster than the wind going over the top of the wing.
How does a plane on a treadmill make this happen, with no wind travelling under the wing???
Using this same logic, a really powerful car on a dyno would not spin the tires on the dyno of it had a really big wing on the back
Maybe that is why ricers have those big wings, to increase the downforce, so they won't spin![]()
Problem with the dyno comparison is a car is wheel driven. An airplane is not. Reference the guy on rollerblades on a treadmill. A rope attaches to his waist and to the handle. Turn the treadmill to 5mph or 500mph. The speed does not matter. He stays stationary (barring wheel/bearing failure). Now pull on the rope or have someone push you(this would be the engine thrust on a plane). What happens? You move up the treadmill with extremely little resistance.
The treadmill is irrelevant.
The treadmill is irrelevant.
The treadmill is irrelevant.
The treadmill is irrelevant.
The treadmill is irrelevant.