Winding up the spring (6 to 8 turns will do quite nicely) provides the power for the car. When it is turned on the car moves slowly across the table while producing a vertical air stream which supports a small styrofoam ball. The ball levitates in the upward air stream due to the Coanda effect, causing the ball to follow along with the car. This demonstration is often explained incorrectly using the Bernoulli effect.
According to the INCORRECT explanation, the ball (or balloon or beachball, etc.) positions itself at the edge of the moving air, with the inside part in the rapidly moving air stream and the outside in the quiescent adjacent air. The pressure is lower in the moving air jet, so the differential pressure keeps the ball levitated in the air stream. The correct explanation involves the Coanda effect. When the air stream flows past the ball, some of the air follows the contour of the ball and only leaves after it moves a significant distance along the surface of the ball, as illustrated in the drawing below. In effect, the ball is "pulling" the air around its surface. There must always be some reaction force on the ball, which points in the direction of the air stream and upward, holding the ball in the air.
Be CAREFUL! Car is fragile and not replaceable.
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Illustrates the Coanda effect
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