toad_oftoadhall
Well-Known Member
The losses are lumped together into the transmission. This is a valid simplification, if you just want to show that steady state is possible at v > vW in principle, despite some losses. Then it doesn't matter where you put the losses.
That's not what I said. There is no contradiction between rolling at windspeed with 100% transmission loss and the formula. If you don't transmit any power, you can loose 100% of it, and it doesn't matter
The formula just gives no useful information for this case, and doesn't have to. You don't care what happens at v <= vW, if you just want to show that steady state is possible at v > vW.
The formula is correct. It follows directly from P = F * vrel:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_(physics)#Mechanical_power
It's just not useful at vrel = 0, but quite usefull for any vrel > 0.
Just like Coulomb's force formula is not useful at r = 0, but quite usefull for any r > 0.
Ok, I say the Formula's self evidently wrong, and I say why. I've had a quick look through Stroud which is the only maths book I have to hand and (unsurprisingly) that doesn't help. I've had a quick look on t'Web with the same result. Throwing further words around isn't going to resolve anything so I'll save us both some time and drop out.
As an aside it seems to me it is useful at the vrel = 0 point!!! If the formula is correct then vrel = 0 looks pretty conclusive to me! But that's another argument, and I doubt either of us have time for it.
PS: Why is Coulomb's force formula not useful at r = 0?
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