No ambiguity. I am not deceiving you. I like magic because it shows how lame we are at observing, and how often we come to the wrong conclusions, even in general.
Thanks for your response humber. I like magic also. I don't think you are deceiving me any longer but I'll watch the show anyway!
I have never knowingly mislead anyone on this forum, here or elsewhere.
I hear you...
Mixed opinions as to how the cart works, or should work, but that is straight forward engineering.
My interpretation of this sentence is that you are not speaking for others, and that therefore the "mixed opinions" are yours.
The treadmill is nonsense. That is not rhetoric. It is stupefyingly wrong.
I've never seen any explanation that I could properly understand for why you have such strong views on the treadmill. I think this applies to other people also. If you wish to convince us, then I really think you need to detail your views on this again in a complete and unambiguous way, possibly even including the basic principles and assumptions you are working with if there seems to be any possibility of confusion in that regard.
You've also indicated that my scenario (#2744!) of essentially using half the world as a large treadmill is somehow wrong but have chosen not to explain why. I also don't think you ever really replied properly to JJcote about his scenario of the cart being tested on an aircraft carrier in the fog - maybe that one ran aground. You didn't think that having the treadmill running on a moving truck in a real wind made any difference when it comes to the validity of using a treadmill. So what exactly is the common issue you've identified with all these scenarios (and others that I may have missed)? In other words, what has to be "removed" or "added" to make any or all of these scenarios acceptable to you? Or are you saying they all have different problems?
That is clear. In other words, you are saying that for all intents and purposes, essentially nothing that anybody has written or presented to you in any other way so far has led you to make any change to the way you understand "physics" (in the context of the relevant threads in these forums).
Not directed at you Clive, but "admitting I am wrong" is given pride of place. I find this to be extraordinary.
It's giving yourself a slap on the back for being wrong, while suggesting that not only is the admission call for celebration, but the very improbability of the error itself. Is it possible to be more conceited than that?
Like John earlier, I couldn't quite work out what you were trying to convey in this part of your response. You have already confirmed that as far as you are concerned, nothing presented to you so far in these threads has exposed any errors in your knowledge or understanding of the relevant physics. You are entitled to that view obviously. However, given that I am also sure you are wrong with your complete rejection that a cart on a treadmill in still air can validly be used as substitute for the cart rolling downwind on the ground at around wind speed, I am left struggling to understand your viewpoint. If however, you had admitted to finding some area of your knowledge and understanding was in fact wrong to start with, and that you'd had to change your views in that respect, then I think I would have felt that there was a little more hope of somehow breaking the impasse. So I'm simply trying to get a handle on how confident you are about your knowledge and views, how open you might be to the possibility of seeing things a different way, and so on. At best, all very subjective though!