Car on a conveyor belt
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A car is standing on a roadway that can move (some sort of band conveyor). The car moves in one direction, while the conveyor moves in the opposite direction. This conveyor has a control system that tracks the <u>cars speed</u> via radar and tunes the speed of the conveyor to be exactly the same (but in opposite direction).
The question is:
Can the car drive off the end of the conveyor or not?
(Sorry, but I want to see how many get this one wrong too)
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Most cars no. Probezilla yes.
The radar will not compensate fast enough or the conveyor will max out. -
Is the radar stationary or attached to conveyor??
I am going to go with yes, because whenever the conveyor is spinning at the same speed as the cars wheels, the car will be not moving, thus the conveyor is at 0 but the cars wheels are still going, until the car moves then the conveyor would start to move again. It is very hard to explain for me but yes, the car would be able to move forward.
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radar is on solid ground, independent of the treadmill.
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I think that the car would drive off of the belt, subsequently destroying the transmission upon meeting the non-moving tarmac.
If the radar shows the car traveling at 10 mph, the belt would be moving at 10 mph... meaning that the car is traveling 20 mph according to the tachometer.
I dont even want to think about what would happen from a standstill.
Is the belt driven by a separate motor? if it is driven by the movement of the tires it would act like a Dyno. The car's tires would spin without moving the vehicle forward at all.
In order for the radar to ever read above 0 their would have to be some sort of horizontal movement. As soon as the belt reacted by matching the cars speed the car would stop moving relative to the ground, causing the car to once again move relative to the ground.
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emmm, it depends. If it had a single turbo it would fall off the back. Twins and it would sprout wings and fly away
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tjamz;203432 wrote:
A car is standing on a roadway that can move (some sort of band conveyor). The car moves in one direction, while the conveyor moves in the opposite direction. This conveyor has a control system that tracks the <u>cars speed</u> via radar and tunes the speed of the conveyor to be exactly the same (but in opposite direction).The question is:
Can the car drive off the end of the conveyor or not?
What kind of car? How many miles? Last oil change?:icon_joker:
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Oh GOD, enough with the f**kin conveyor belt already....five ass clowns on a conveyor belt...
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Ok...so you have an F1 car on a conveyor belt....can you generate enough downforce to drive upside down?
Sorry Scott...
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still tracking the speed of the object and not the wheels.. so yeah.. it's traveling. all the way off the conveyor belt.
If this conveyor belt experiment is left unmanned, computer-controlled, in a walmart parking lot, and takes in excess of four minutes, how many abandoned shopping carts will the car hit?
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