If the rotors were strong enough and fast enough
i.e. if it was a helicopter, which relied upon moving atmosphere from above to below, rather than generating its own gas and pushes that away?
This is why your rocket works with atmosphere and why it lifts off quickly.
You are yet to show how rockets work with atmosphere rather than just a lot of pressure.
As has already been pointed out, hovercraft use the atmosphere, as in they use fans/rotors which move it.
Rockets don't.
It's complete nonsense
So far the only nonsense in this thread is that presented by FEers trying to refute the reality of rockets working in space.
They need to resort to pure nonsense which results in the insanity of high pressure gas being trapped in an open container, while rejecting extremely well established laws of physics backed up by mountains of evidence.
Again, if you want to assert they are nonsense and have anyone take you seriously you need to address the very simple issue you have been avoiding for so long.
One bar of atmosphere?
No wonder you can't get your head around it.
So reality gets in the way?
1 bar isn't anything significant for a rocket, especially considering it is pushing all around the rocket.
Get it right and understand the action and reaction sequence.
We do. You are the one massively struggling with it.
The rocket pushes a lot of gas out at a very high velocity (action).
In reaction the gas pushes the rocket up.
Not very difficult.
But of course, as it doesn't need the atmosphere that would mean rockets work in space so you need to reject it.
But up in space, just consider the action reaction sequence. Does the gas leave?
If so, that demands a reaction, and the only thing that can be is the rocket moving.
It's around 15 lbs per square inch of external pressure.
Or around 10 000 kg/m^2. Not much.
For a rocket like the Saturn V which weighed 2 970 000 kg, you would need more like 300 bar, like what was produced by the engines.
You have to try and push that 15 lbs per square inch away by creating a pressure to do just that.
And the much higher pressure of the engine can easily do that, making it as if the atmosphere wasn't there.
The atmosphere cannot resist that pressure and push back by any significant amount.
It is only the high pressure gas from the rocket that can push the rocket up.
If it was a gas fight like in your fantasy you would see the exhaust stay with the rocket or at best fly out to the sides.
What you are told is basically baloney but it needs to be baloney otherwise space rockets
Yes, what you repeatedly say is baloney. But you need it to be otherwise they clearly show Earth is round, and you can't handle that.
If it was all baloney then why are you incapable of addressing such a simple issue?
And yet none of you can string together a response from your own minds.
More pathetic lies.
Plenty of us have made a quite coherent response which exposes your nonsense by ourselves.
I don't need to go and copy and paste to refute your nonsense.
I did that quite early on in the thread and you still haven't figured out a solution which can prevent rockets from working in space without magically containing gas.
Again, how does the gas leave the rocket when you claim such motion would be impossible as there is no atmosphere and nothing to push off?