He needs a pair of General Electric J79 jet engines with afterburners. “If you put enough thrust behind anything, you can make it fly.” – Designers or the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II.
When I was in pilot training at Moody AFB in Georgia (look for it by the big “O” in Okefenokee) we would have to deal with turtles who would sun themselves on the runway from time to time. The base sent out an airman in a truck to pick up the turtle and toss it back in the swamp. The tower would then advise, "Caution, wake turbulence, departing turtle).
There was one day when I heard the announcement that one of the runways was closed due to a alligator on the runway. It was not removed, “rasslin’ gators” apparently was not in the airman’s job description.
Back to the comic strip and its scientific inaccuracies. The diagram shoes no vortices. None. Vortices would enhance drag but with no vortices shown, there is no corresponding increase in drag due to vortices. The diagram does show a reason for an increase in lift. Air flow as diagrammed gives lift but perhaps not enough for the tortoise to fly. That the tortoise shell generates some lift with wind is somewhat ironic because an inability to fly is the bird’s tag line.
oldthang 11 months ago
You talking to me, bird?
dcdete. 11 months ago
Are the colorists on strike at GoComics demanding more money. Even though the John Hart Studios has already paid for the color at their website?
By the way, surprising to know the bird isn’t actually white, the bird is actually red!
Imagine 11 months ago
Slow? Physically or mentally?
figuratively speaking 11 months ago
Of course it’s the vortices. Whatever do you mean?
Farside99 11 months ago
So that’s why my old VW was so slow, right? 62mph on a long straight with no wind!
Troglodyte 11 months ago
Aerodynamics is a drag.
jagedlo 11 months ago
I think you should have gone with a slide show, John…
dflak 11 months ago
He needs a pair of General Electric J79 jet engines with afterburners. “If you put enough thrust behind anything, you can make it fly.” – Designers or the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II.
eric_harris_76 11 months ago
What vortices? Looks pretty laminar to me.
Mountain Meg 11 months ago
It slows you down when flying with the turtle, but you should get good lift.
Chithing Premium Member 11 months ago
He just thinks John is a drag.
rockyridge1977 11 months ago
Science………!!!!!!!
LKrueger41 11 months ago
Any excuse will do if it makes you feel better.
ChessPirate 11 months ago
Maybe going “Neeeyowww” as you walk would help? ☺
abennett Premium Member 11 months ago
A dimpled shell will take care of that and reduce drag. That will be enough to see [no] change in his top speed. :)
krs27 11 months ago
Did they have color in bc’s day?
dflak 11 months ago
When I was in pilot training at Moody AFB in Georgia (look for it by the big “O” in Okefenokee) we would have to deal with turtles who would sun themselves on the runway from time to time. The base sent out an airman in a truck to pick up the turtle and toss it back in the swamp. The tower would then advise, "Caution, wake turbulence, departing turtle).
There was one day when I heard the announcement that one of the runways was closed due to a alligator on the runway. It was not removed, “rasslin’ gators” apparently was not in the airman’s job description.
BruceMilam1 11 months ago
I feel somewhat cheated!
mindjob 11 months ago
At least he gets the participation award!
bull_moose_1912 11 months ago
So John has apparently learned something of fluid mechanics…let’s talk about Reynolds numbers and tortoise shells.
dlestersprint0 11 months ago
The bird is what makes John fly. That makes the bird slow.
Fuzzy Kombu 11 months ago
Nonsense. That’s a lifting body if ever there was one! (This explains all those flying tortoises which we’ve always had to dodge.)
Cerabooge 11 months ago
He’s so envious of the Aptera tortoise.
mistercatworks 11 months ago
I hope he doesn’t add an airfoil as do many auto designers, who think adding a minimum (and useless) airfoil to a sedan makes it “sporty”.
Abby B Premium Member 10 months ago
Back to the comic strip and its scientific inaccuracies. The diagram shoes no vortices. None. Vortices would enhance drag but with no vortices shown, there is no corresponding increase in drag due to vortices. The diagram does show a reason for an increase in lift. Air flow as diagrammed gives lift but perhaps not enough for the tortoise to fly. That the tortoise shell generates some lift with wind is somewhat ironic because an inability to fly is the bird’s tag line.