• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Engineering YouTuber Weighs An Airbus A320 Plane Whilst It Is Still Flying

June 19, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Material scientist Brian Haidet has weighed a plane while it was flying for his YouTube channel AlphaPhoenix. 

To weigh a plane, usually you would place scales underneath the landing gears, nose gears, and wing support points. But if you don’t have access to a plane and plane scales – or you just want to do something cool for fun – it is possible to take a very rough measurement of its weight using some fairly simple devices.

In the new video posted to AlphaPhoenix, Haidet did just this, creating a set of sensitive scales before attempting to weigh a commercial plane. How?

“As any object moves through the air it has to push that air out of the way. And if that object is really strategically shaped, it can push most of this air downwards, which results in an equal and opposite reaction pushing up on the moving object, keeping it in the air. Typically, this process is referred to as flying,” Haidet explains in the video.

“But that air that’s been accelerated downwards below the wing, everybody always forgets about. Where does that air go? Well, it’s moving downwards; it can’t move down forever. Eventually, it hits the ground. And when that moving air reaches the ground, it can’t go any farther. It stops. The air exerts a force on the ground, and the ground exerts a force on the air, decelerating the air. In this way, the total weight of any flying object is eventually transmitted to the ground.”

Haidet first created a large scale using a flat piece of material and load cells, a type of transducer that deforms as a force is applied to it, altering its resistance. This difference in resistance can be measured in order to deduce weight (if the force were, for example, you standing on the load cells). 

He then conducted a number of tests on the homemade scales, including throwing a lot of paper airplanes over the device to check that it was registering downwards force created by the airplane. In cool demonstrations, the scales move as the plane exerts a downward force on the air to remain flying on a straight or upwards path.



While that was pretty much point proven, Haidet then headed to an airport to try the same thing with a full-scale airplane. For a real plane, he adjusted the scales a little. Instead, he measured pressure changes within a box and compared it to the outside, but again using load cells to do the job. 

The conditions were not ideal, with wind and a lack of a giant scale to measure the whole plane’s weight, spread out as it is. But after a few attempts, Haidet was able to see the telltale spike of a plane passing overhead, as well as a “weird negative signal” that kept appearing as he measured other planes.

Taking the best read, with the smallest negative signal, he attempted to make some rough estimates of the plane’s weight, using a number of assumptions about the plane’s speed and distance. The weight he calculated using these assumptions was around 2 tons, far short of the Airbus A320’s true weight. But it’s pretty impressive that you can detect and (very roughly) measure the weight of a plane from the ground below.

“I was super excited to have detected any signal with this scale,” Haidet added. “And I can say that, you know, although I probably had some systematic error in my measurement that I haven’t yet accounted for, I was able to measure the weight of an airplane while that airplane was in the air. I think that’s pretty cool.”

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – Late goal gives Uruguay 1-0 win over Ecuador
  2. Bright Blue “Lava” Spews From Indonesia’s Kawah Ijen Volcano
  3. The Icy Odyssey Of Ancient Earth’s Frozen Era Is Explored In A New Series
  4. Horoscopes For Squid? Their Dates Of Birth Determine How They Will Mate

Source Link: Engineering YouTuber Weighs An Airbus A320 Plane Whilst It Is Still Flying

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Psychologists Offer A “New Path” To The Good Life
  • Mirror Writing: Why Do So Many Children Write Backwards?
  • An Enormous “Blob” In Utah Is Up To 80,000 Years Old And Among Earth’s Oldest Organisms
  • Over Half Of Tuvalu Nationals Apply For Ballot Offering Australian “Climate Visa”
  • Process “To Unlock The Deepest Secrets Of Antarctica’s Ice” Begins With 1.5-Million-Year-Old Sample
  • Our Galaxy Appears To Be Part Of A Structure So Large It Challenges Our Current Models Of Cosmology
  • “Eerie, Beautiful, And Interesting”: The Most Unbelievable Things We Have Seen On Mars
  • Asteroid 33 Polyhymnia May Contain Elements Not Yet Seen On Earth
  • The Transverse Thomson Effect Finally Observed After 174 Years
  • “Extraordinary Fossil” Of Giant Ichthyosaur Dates Back 183 Million Years, 8 Children Have Been Born With 3 Biological Parents Each, And Much More This Week
  • A Spinning Island Lake In Argentina Looms Out Of The Swamps Like An Eyeball
  • Mammals Have Evolved Into Ant Eaters 12 Times Since The Dinosaurs Went Extinct
  • Thieving Pulsar Spinning 592 Times A Second Reveals New Understanding Of Where Its X-Rays Come From
  • The Rise And Fall (And Lamentable Rise) Of The “Alpha Male” Myth
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: How Do Black Holes Shape The Universe?
  • North America’s Smallest Turtle Is The Cutest Thing You’ll Find In A Bog
  • “Unambiguous Signal” To Curb Emissions Now: Long-Lost Aerial Photos Reveal Evolution Of Antarctic Ice Shelf Collapse
  • 8 Children Have Been Born With 3 Biological Parents Each After Mitochondrial Transfer
  • First Known Observations Of Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry In Special Particle Decay
  • In 1973, NASA Sent Two Spiders Into Space To See If They Can Spin Webs – And They Learnt A Lot
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version