Propeller Flight Investigation to Determine the Effects of Blade Loading (open access)

Propeller Flight Investigation to Determine the Effects of Blade Loading

Note presenting a flight investigation of a three-blade propeller in climb and at high speed to determine the effects of blade power loading. Increasing the blade power coefficient from 0.06 to 0.09 was found to increase the efficiency approximately 8 percent at an airplane Mach number of 0.7 and a propeller-tip Mach number of 1.13. In climb, an increase in power loading over the range of blade power coefficients investigated was shown to reduce efficiency, as a consequence of increased induced drag losses.
Date: January 1950
Creator: Hammack, Jerome B. & Vogeley, A. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Time-dependent downwash at the tail and the pitching moment due to normal acceleration at supersonic speeds (open access)

Time-dependent downwash at the tail and the pitching moment due to normal acceleration at supersonic speeds

Report presenting an analysis of the time-dependent downwash behind a wing in a supersonic stream when the angle of attack varies linearly with time. The result is applied to the calculation of the contribution of the horizontal tail to the pitching moment and lift due to normal acceleration of the airplane. Results regarding downwash charts and some limitations on the results are provided.
Date: February 1950
Creator: Ribner, Herbert S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of effect of variations in primary variables on time constant and turbine-inlet-temperature overshoot of turbojet engine (open access)

Analysis of effect of variations in primary variables on time constant and turbine-inlet-temperature overshoot of turbojet engine

From Introduction: "The design of turbojet-engine control systems is intimately related to the dynamic characteristics of the engine and has advanced to the stage where theoretically correct control constants can be determined for fixed dynamic properties (references 1 and 2). The use of the thermodynamic equations presupposes that the engine processes are quansi-static. Such an assumption is shown to be valid for a turbojet engine in references 3 and 4.
Date: September 1950
Creator: Heidmann, Marcus F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical investigation and application of transonic similarity law for two dimensional flow (open access)

Theoretical investigation and application of transonic similarity law for two dimensional flow

Report presenting an investigation of the use of the transonic similarity law for two-dimensional flow by an iteration procedure. The results indicated that potential can be expressed as a power series in a single parameter that depends on Mach number, thickness ratio, and ratio of specific heats.
Date: October 1950
Creator: Perl, William & Klein, Milton M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of the Laplace Transformation to the Solution of the Lateral and Longitudinal Stability Equations (open access)

Application of the Laplace Transformation to the Solution of the Lateral and Longitudinal Stability Equations

Note presenting the application of the Laplace transformation to the solution of the lateral and longitudinal stability equations. The expressions for the time history of the motion in response to a sinusoidal control motion are derived for the general case in which all initial measurements are assumed different from zero.
Date: January 1950
Creator: Mokrzycki, G. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library