Would Wild Birds Eat Grapes If They Were...
Home & Garden3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by kermit911. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You would still be able to "see through" the blades no matter how fast they were spinning, as Loosehead has pointed out.
Once the object is spinning sufficiently quickly, we just see it as a circular blur. How see-through this blur is basically depends on how big/wide the spinning object is. (More accurately, it depends on what percentage of the full circle the object "takes up" when it is stationary. Assume the object is fully opaque to begin with)
I've made a brief animation to show this. The semicircle takes up 50% of the area of the full circle. So, once it is spinning so fast that it's a blur, the blur has an opacity of 50%.