200 mph RC Car
200 mph RC Car
No, for real, not to scale 200 mph, but really going 200 mph!
http://www.fazed.org/video/view/?id=96
http://www.fazed.org/video/view/?id=96
- CDN_Merlin
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- BUBBALOU
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spoken like a true idiotBigSlideHimself wrote:Fake.
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A standard Glow R/C can do about 80MPH ..now just add a two speed (stock) gearbox and it now can easily get to 140. So from the perspective of your lint covered bellybutton why is it hard to see that with just a little benchwork you can easily achieve 200..
Go buy one and learn the error in your ways..
Or take the Mobi challenge and STFU
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You didn't get that, Bubbalou? I fell out of my chair laughing! I guess there's just no appreciation for concise, invisible humor anymore...BigSlideHimself wrote:Fake.
Personally I wasn't impressed by their RC. It's kind of neat, seeing just how fast that thing starts to go, but the title got my hopes up. I'm convinced that the centrifugal force augments the acceleration. That's cheating.
www.m-w.com wrote:centripetal: proceeding or acting in a direction toward a center or axis
centrifugal: proceeding or acting in a direction away from a center or axis
I'll say this again. There is no such thing as centrifugal force. You can ask anyone who has taken an Intro to Physics course and they will tell you the same thing. Centripetal force causes bodies to remain in circular motion. The vector of centripetal force points towards the center of rotation, and the velocity of the object points straight forward. Thus, all centripetal force does is change the object's direction of motion, NOT its speed in that direction. If centrifugal force existed (i.e. a force that pointed away from the center of rotation) then the object would spiral away.Sergeant Thorne wrote:I'm convinced that the centrifugal force augments the acceleration. That's cheating.
What provides the centripetal force in this example is the force of friction on the car (and possibly the guardrail if the car is running against it). If the track is sloped in towards the middle, like a NASCAR track, then the force of gravity provides a component of the centripetal force as well. The guy in the center starts the car going in circular motion, and the force of friction (mu_k * Fn, where mu_k = the coefficient of friction and Fn = the car's weight) causes the car to stay on the track. If the car travels fast enough where it exerts enough forward force to overcome that force of kinetic friction, then the car will smash facefirst into the guardrail.
- WarAdvocat
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Actually, DCrazy is right...So-called centrifugal "force" is an illusion created by centripedal acceleration. However, it is quite a powerful illusion, and for the purposes of everyday conversation, it's usually unnecessary to get too technical. If you were going to play a game of dodgeball in a spinning 'wheel'-type space station, it might be necessary...but not here.Sergeant Thorne wrote:I'm convinced that the centrifugal force augments the acceleration. That's cheating.
Incidentally, if my eyes don't deceive me, it appears that the car is actually running perpendicular to the ground on that strip of metal.
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I guess I stand corrected. What you're saying seems to make sense, DCrazy; I'm going to look into it.
Bubbalou, I was being sarcastic. "Fake." a joke does not make.
Not what I was thinking. In fact I noticed what may have been the cord stretching a little as the thing picked up speed. That would be cool if they did that, though!roid wrote:perhaps some are thinking that the cable is getting increasingly shorter every rotation as it wraps around the central pole - that'd slingshot it, yes?
Bubbalou, I was being sarcastic. "Fake." a joke does not make.
- Mobius
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No, that would be the Coriolis Force you're confusing there.WarAdvocat wrote:If you were going to play a game of dodgeball in a spinning 'wheel'-type space station, it might be necessary...but not here.
Centripetal "gravity" is indistinguishable from real gravity. The only difference is that dropped items follow a curving path to the floor (as seen by the dropper), not a straight line.
BigSlide, don't stress over Bubba's latent "goin' postal" tendencies. He shows these personality flaws pretty regularly. Take him with several grains of salt. I do. Just keep remembering that only fools stoop to argumentum ad hominen. Mostly it's a last resort - but for Bubba, it's the first thing he does.
Let's celebrate people. Mobi said something insightful!Mobius wrote:Centripetal "gravity" is indistinguishable from real gravity.
They are using the cable to minimise the length of their runway (by going round in circles they have an endless runway, plus, the rotational movement induced by the cable ensures the car follows a given track without deviating due to wind or other irregularities).
Yes, the car reaches 200mph on it's own.
Having said that, it's not so impressive after all. Some moving parts in machinery reach much higher peak speeds than that. Rotation is in some way cheating, due to the extra guidance provided by the cable. It would be way off trajectory before it could even reach a fraction of 200mph in a straight line.
Oh well. Next random fact?
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