Swango1980
Well-known member
It is a paradox if you think the speed of the treadmill can be programmed to match the speed (but in reverse direction) that the wheels are moving in based on the direction and speed the plane wants to move. Because, the wheels on a plane can only move in the first place if the plane moved forward. If the plane remains still, the wheels will remain still. And the treadmill is only reacting to what the wheels do. So, someone could try and write a program to attempt it, but all that would happen is that the engines would propel the plane forwards, wheels start moving, treadmill starts moving, wheels move faster, treadmill moves faster. The treadmill and wheels would just continually speed up, the treadmill could never catch up and the plane would just take off as per normal.Ffs. I'm still thinking about it.
Isn't there some kind of paradox?
If the rotation of the wheels and the speed of the conveyor belt are constantly perfectly matched then they could be considered being geared at a 1:1 ratio, as if cogged. Therefore the plane can only move forward on the belt if its wheels are going faster than the belt. Which breaks the rules set out in the puzzle.
Doesn't it?
As Crow said in post 396 (and he said it previously), the post does not actually say it is a treadmill, but a conveyor belt (which may or may not be the same thing). The conveyor belt may actually be programmed to move forwards, in the direction the plane wants to move in. This can be said to counter the wheels rotation. Therefore, the plane still moves forward as normal, the belt moves forward and the wheels simply stay still.
Both cases, the plane obviously takes off. But the treadmill / conveyor belt runs in different directions. The second option is much more practical, because the first option would just result in the treadmill having to run incredible speeds as it is chasing a speed that it can never catch up with, many many times a second.