Serial/Series Title

Energy Loss, Velocity Distribution, and Temperature Distribution for a Baffled Cylinder Model (open access)

Energy Loss, Velocity Distribution, and Temperature Distribution for a Baffled Cylinder Model

A study has been made of the important principles involved in the operation of a baffle for an engine cylinder and shows that cooling can be improved by 20 percent by using a correctly designed baffle. Such a gain is as effective as a 65 percent increase in pressure drop across the standard baffle, which had a 1/4 inch clearance between baffle and fin tips.
Date: October 1937
Creator: Brevoort, Maurice J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The measurement of air speed in airplanes (open access)

The measurement of air speed in airplanes

Various methods of measuring the air speed of airplanes are described. Particular emphasis is placed on the procedure required to obtain precise measurements of speed by the use of the suspended Pitot-static head or the suspended static head. Typical calibration curves for service installations of Pitot-static heads are shown and the relation between errors in air speed and corresponding errors in observed altitude for such installations is discussed. There is included a brief discussion of various speed-course methods of measuring speed.
Date: October 1937
Creator: Thompson, F. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability of Structural Members Under Axial Load (open access)

Stability of Structural Members Under Axial Load

"The principles of the Cross method of moment distribution are used to check the stability of structural members under axial load. A brief theoretical treatment of the subject, together with an illustrative problem, is included as well as a discussion of the reduced modulus at high stresses and a set of tables to aid in the solution of practical problems" (p. 1).
Date: October 1937
Creator: Lundquist, Eugene E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Increasing the Strength of Aluminum-Alloy Columns by Prestressing (open access)

Increasing the Strength of Aluminum-Alloy Columns by Prestressing

A series of tests was made in which the column strength of 17ST tubing was increased as much as 50 percent by prestressing the tubing to 40,000 pounds per square inch in compression under conditions of support that prevented column failure at this stress. This prestressing achieves it's beneficial effects entirely by improving the compressive properties of the material, principally the proportional limit.
Date: October 1937
Creator: Holt, M. & Hartman, E. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library