Theoretical Study of the Tunnel-Boundary Lift Interference Due to Slotted Walls in the Presence of the Trailing-Vortex System of a Lifting Model (open access)

Theoretical Study of the Tunnel-Boundary Lift Interference Due to Slotted Walls in the Presence of the Trailing-Vortex System of a Lifting Model

"The equations presented in this report give the interference on the trailing-vortex system of a uniformly loaded finite-span wing in a circular tunnel containing partly open and partly closed walls, with special reference to symmetrical arrangements of the open and closed portions. Methods are given for extending the equations to include tunnel shapes other than circular. The rectangular tunnel is used to demonstrate these methods. The equations are also extended to nonuniformly loaded wings" (p. 361).
Date: February 3, 1953
Creator: Matthews, Clarence W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical study of the tunnel-boundary lift interference due to slotted walls in the presence of the trailing-vortex system of a lifting model (open access)

Theoretical study of the tunnel-boundary lift interference due to slotted walls in the presence of the trailing-vortex system of a lifting model

Report presenting some equations that give the interference on the trailing-vortex system of a uniformly loaded finite-span wing in a circular tunnel containing partly open and partly closed walls, with special reference to symmetrical arrangements of the open and closed portions. Methods are given for extending the equations to include tunnel shapes other than circular.
Date: April 7, 1953
Creator: Matthews, Clarence W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Measurements of Lift and Drag for the Bell X-1 Research Airplane Having a 10-Percent-Thick Wing (open access)

Flight Measurements of Lift and Drag for the Bell X-1 Research Airplane Having a 10-Percent-Thick Wing

Report presenting drag coefficients during power-off transonic flight for the Bell X-1 airplane with a 10-percent-thick wing over a range of Mach numbers and pressure altitudes. The data was compared to an X-1 with an 8-percent-thick wing and a wind tunnel test with a 10-percent-thick wing. Information about necessary angle of attack, drag-rise Mach number, maximum lift-drag ratio, and drag coefficient at zero lift is provided.
Date: September 3, 1953
Creator: Saltzman, Edwin J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic Characteristics in Pitch and Sideslip at High Subsonic Speeds of a 1/14-Scale Model of the Grumman XF104 Airplane with Wing Sweepback of 42.5 Degrees (open access)

Aerodynamic Characteristics in Pitch and Sideslip at High Subsonic Speeds of a 1/14-Scale Model of the Grumman XF104 Airplane with Wing Sweepback of 42.5 Degrees

"An investigation has been made at high subsonic speeds of the aerodynamic characteristics in pitch and sideslip of a 1/l4-scale model of the Grumman XF10F airplane with a wing sweepback angle of 42.5. The longitudinal stability characteristics (with the horizontal tail fixed) indicate a pitch-up near the stall; however, this was somewhat alleviated by the addition of fins to the side of the fuselage below the horizontal tail. The original model configuration became directionally unstable for small sideslip angles at Mach numbers above 0.8; however, the instability was eliminated by several different modifications" (p. 1).
Date: August 18, 1953
Creator: Kuhn, Richard E. & Draper, John W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of several methods for determining transfer functions and frequency response of aircraft from flight data (open access)

Application of several methods for determining transfer functions and frequency response of aircraft from flight data

Report presenting an investigation of the methods of analyzing longitudinal frequency-response characteristics of aircraft. The methods considered are analysis of sinusoidal response, analysis of transient response to harmonic content through determination of the Fourier integral, and analysis of the transient through the use of least-squares solutions of the coefficients of an assume equation for the transient time or frequency response.
Date: September 1953
Creator: Eggleston, John M. & Mathews, Charles W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of External Store Mounting on the Buffet, Trim, and Drag Characteristics of Rocket-Powered Fuselage and Store Combinations Between Mach Numbers of 0.7 and 1.4 (open access)

Effects of External Store Mounting on the Buffet, Trim, and Drag Characteristics of Rocket-Powered Fuselage and Store Combinations Between Mach Numbers of 0.7 and 1.4

Memorandum presenting an investigation made of the effects of store mounting on the buffet, trim, and drag characteristics of fuselage-mounted external stores between Mach numbers of 0.7 and 1.4 by the use of the rocket-propelled-model technique. Results of the tests are presented in the incremental accelerations in the stores due to buffeting, trim normal- and side-force coefficients, tail helix angles, and drag coefficients plotted against Mach number.
Date: December 10, 1953
Creator: Mason, Homer P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Effects of Leading-Edge Roughness on the Aileron Effectiveness and Drag of a Thin Rectangular Wing Employing a Full-Span Plain Aileron at Mach Numbers From 0.6 to 1.5 (open access)

Some Effects of Leading-Edge Roughness on the Aileron Effectiveness and Drag of a Thin Rectangular Wing Employing a Full-Span Plain Aileron at Mach Numbers From 0.6 to 1.5

Report presenting an investigation of the effects of adding leading-edge roughness to the surfaces of an unswept, untapered, 6-percent-thick, circular-arc-airfoil wing equipped with a full-span, 0.2-chord, plain, trailing-edge aileron. Results regarding the rolling-effectiveness data, addition of roughness on a wing, and variation of drag coefficient are provided.
Date: November 4, 1953
Creator: English, Roland D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Lift Buffet Characteristics Obtained From Flight Tests of Unswept Thin Intersecting Surfaces and of Thick 35 Degree Sweptback Surfaces (open access)

Low-Lift Buffet Characteristics Obtained From Flight Tests of Unswept Thin Intersecting Surfaces and of Thick 35 Degree Sweptback Surfaces

Report presenting testing of two rocket-propelled research models to determine the effect of the intersection of thin aerodynamic surfaces and the effect of moderate sweepback of thick aerodynamic surfaces on low-lift buffeting. Results regarding trim changes and drag are also provided. It was discovered that low-lift buffeting may be induced at high subsonic speeds by interference due to the intersection of thin aerodynamic surfaces.
Date: January 16, 1953
Creator: Mason, Homer P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Aerodynamic Characteristics of an NACA 64A006 Airfoil Section With a 15-Percent-Chord Leading-Edge Flap (open access)

Transonic Aerodynamic Characteristics of an NACA 64A006 Airfoil Section With a 15-Percent-Chord Leading-Edge Flap

Report presenting information about airfoil section normal-force, drag, pitching-moment, flap-normal-force, and hinge-moment characteristics at Mach numbers from 0.5 to 1.0 on an NACA 64A006 airfoil with 15-percent-chord leading-edge flap. Differing results were noted in the Mach ranges of 0.5 to 0.8 and over 0.8.
Date: September 1, 1953
Creator: Humphreys, Milton D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Mean Camber Surfaces for Wings Having Uniform Chordwise Loading and Arbitrary Spanwise Loading in Subsonic Flow (open access)

Determination of Mean Camber Surfaces for Wings Having Uniform Chordwise Loading and Arbitrary Spanwise Loading in Subsonic Flow

"The field of a uniformly loaded wing in subsonic flow is discussed in terms of the acceleration potential. It is shown that, for the design of such wings, the slope of the mean camber surface at any point can be determined by a line integration around the wing boundary. By an additional line integration around the wing boundary, this method is extended to include the case where the local section lift coefficient varies with spanwise location (the chordwise loading at every section still remaining uniform)" (p. 471).
Date: January 13, 1953
Creator: Katzoff, S.; Faison, M. Frances & DuBose, Hugh C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Test Results of Rocket-Propelled Buffet-Research Models Having 45 Degree Sweptback Wings and 45 Degree Sweptback Tails Located in the Wing Chord Plane (open access)

Flight Test Results of Rocket-Propelled Buffet-Research Models Having 45 Degree Sweptback Wings and 45 Degree Sweptback Tails Located in the Wing Chord Plane

"Three rocket-propelled buffet-research models have been flight tested to determine the buffeting characteristics of a swept-wing- airplane configuration with the horizontal tail operating near the wing wake. The models consisted of parabolic bodies having 45 deg sweptback wings of aspect ratio 3.56, at aspect ratio of 0.3, NACA 64A007 airfoil sections, and tail surfaces of geometry and section identical to the wings. Two tests were conducted with the horizontal tail located in the wing chord plane with fixed incidence angles of -1.5deg on one model and 0deg on the other model" (p. 1).
Date: November 4, 1953
Creator: Mason, Homer P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Trim and Dynamic Response Characteristics of the Horizontal Tail of a 1/7-Scale Model of the Complete Tail of the Grumman XF10F-1 Airplane (open access)

A Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Trim and Dynamic Response Characteristics of the Horizontal Tail of a 1/7-Scale Model of the Complete Tail of the Grumman XF10F-1 Airplane

"An investigation was made of the trim and dynamic response characteristics of the free-floating horizontal tail of a 1/7-scale model of the complete tail of the Grumman XF10F-1 airplane in the Langley 8-foot transonic tunnel at Mach numbers up to 1.13. The complete tail was mounted in the tunnel on a 3 degree conical support body. Various configurations were investigated. A loss in damping of the horizontal tail at transonic speeds was shown by both tunnel and flight tests" (p. 1).
Date: April 28, 1953
Creator: Luoma, Arvo A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cooperative Investigation of Relationship Between Static and Fatigue Properties of Wrought N-155 Alloy at Elevated Temperatures (open access)

Cooperative Investigation of Relationship Between Static and Fatigue Properties of Wrought N-155 Alloy at Elevated Temperatures

Report presents the correlation of extensive data obtained relating properties of wrought N-155 alloy under static, combined static and dynamic, and complete reversed dynamic stress conditions. Time period for fracture ranged from 50 to 500 hours at room temperature, 1,000 degrees, 1,200 degrees, and 1,500 degrees F.
Date: June 15, 1953
Creator: NACA Subcommittee on Power-Plant Materials
System: The UNT Digital Library