Aerodynamic Characteristics of Aerofoils 2: Continuation of Report No. 93 (open access)

Aerodynamic Characteristics of Aerofoils 2: Continuation of Report No. 93

"This collection of data on aerofoils has been made from the published reports of a number of the leading aerodynamic laboratories of this country and Europe. The information which was originally expressed according to the different customs of the several laboratories is here presented in a uniform series of charts and tables suitable for the use of designing engineers and for purposes of general reference. The absolute system of coefficients has been used, since it is thought by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics that this system is the one most suited for international use, and yet is one for which a desired transformation can be easily made" (p. 423).
Date: 1923~
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aeronautic instruments. Section 2: altitude instruments (open access)

Aeronautic instruments. Section 2: altitude instruments

This report is Section two of a series of reports on aeronautic instruments (Technical Report nos. 125 to 132, inclusive). This section discusses briefly barometric altitude determinations, and describes in detail the principal types of altimeters and barographs used in aeronautics during the recent war. This is followed by a discussion of performance requirements for such instruments and an account of the methods of testing developed by the Bureau of Standards. The report concludes with a brief account of the results of recent investigations. For accurate measurements of altitude, reference must also be made to thermometer readings of atmospheric temperature, since the altitude is not fixed by atmospheric pressure alone. This matter is discussed in connection with barometric altitude determination.
Date: 1923?
Creator: Mears, A. H.; Henrickson, H. B. & Brombacher, W. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aeronautic Instruments Section 3: Aircraft Speed Instruments (open access)

Aeronautic Instruments Section 3: Aircraft Speed Instruments

Part 1 contains a discussion and description of the various types of air speed measuring instruments. The authors then give general specifications and performance requirements with the results of tests on air speed indicators at the Bureau of Standards. Part 2 reports methods and laboratory apparatus used at the Bureau of Standards to make static tests. Methods are also given of combining wind tunnel tests with static tests. Consideration is also given to free flight tests. Part 3 discusses the problem of finding suitable methods for the purpose of measuring the speed of aircraft relative to the ground.
Date: 1923?
Creator: Hunt, Franklin L. & Stearns, H. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aeronautic Instruments Section 4: Direction Instruments (open access)

Aeronautic Instruments Section 4: Direction Instruments

Part one points out the adequacy of a consideration of the steady state gyroscopic motion as a basis for the discussion of displacements of the gyroscope mounted on an airplane, and develops a simple theory on this basis. Part two describes a new type of stabilizing gyro mounted on top of a spindle by means of a universal joint, the spindle being kept in a vertical position by supporting it as a pendulum of which the bob is the driving motor. Methods of tests and the difficulties in designing a satisfactory and reliable compass for aircraft use in considered in part three. Part four contains a brief general treatment of the important features of construction of aircraft compasses and description of the principal types used.
Date: 1923%
Creator: Franklin, W. S.; Stillman, M. H.; Sanford, R. L.; Warner, John A. C.; Sylvander, R. C. & Rounds, E. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aeronautic instruments. Section 5 : power plant instruments (open access)

Aeronautic instruments. Section 5 : power plant instruments

Part 1 gives a general discussion of the uses, principles, construction, and operation of airplane tachometers. Detailed description of all available instruments, both foreign and domestic, are given. Part 2 describes methods of tests and effect of various conditions encountered in airplane flight such as change of temperature, vibration, tilting, and reduced air pressure. Part 3 describes the principal types of distance reading thermometers for aircraft engines, including an explanation of the physical principles involved in the functioning of the instruments and proper filling of the bulbs. Performance requirements and testing methods are given and a discussion of the source of error and results of tests. Part 4 gives methods of tests and calibration, also requirements of gauges of this type for the pressure measurement of the air pressure in gasoline tanks and the engine oil pressure on airplanes. Part 5 describes two types of gasoline gauges, the float type and the pressure type.
Date: 1923
Creator: Washburn, G. E.; Sylvander, R. C.; Mueller, E. F.; Wilhelm, R. M.; Eaton, H. N. & Warner, John A. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aeronautic Instruments Section 6: Oxygen Instruments (open access)

Aeronautic Instruments Section 6: Oxygen Instruments

This report contains statements as to amount of oxygen required at different altitudes and the methods of storing oxygen. The two types of control apparatus - the compressed oxygen type and the liquid oxygen type - are described. Ten different instruments of the compressed type are described, as well as the foreign instruments of the liquid types. The performance and specifications and the results of laboratory tests on all representative types conclude this report.
Date: 1923%
Creator: Hunt, F. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aeronautic instruments. Section 6 : aerial navigation and navigating instruments (open access)

Aeronautic instruments. Section 6 : aerial navigation and navigating instruments

This report outlines briefly the methods of aerial navigation which have been developed during the past few years, with a description of the different instruments used. Dead reckoning, the most universal method of aerial navigation, is first discussed. Then follows an outline of the principles of navigation by astronomical observation; a discussion of the practical use of natural horizons, such as sea, land, and cloud, in making extant observations; the use of artificial horizons, including the bubble, pendulum, and gyroscopic types. A description is given of the recent development of the radio direction finder and its application to navigation.
Date: 1923%
Creator: Eaton, H. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of taking off and landing an airplane (open access)

A study of taking off and landing an airplane

"This report covers the results of an investigation carried on at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics for the purpose of discussing the various methods of effecting the take-off and the landing of an airplane, and to make a direct analysis of the control movements, the accelerations, and air speeds during these the maneuvers. The recording instruments developed at the laboratory were used in this test and the records obtained by them were made the basis for a comparative study of the two extreme methods of taking off (the tail-high and tail-low methods) and of various types of landings. The records should be of considerable value to a student pilot in enabling him to visualize the movements of the controls and the consequent effect upon the air speed and acceleration" (p. 555)
Date: 1923
Creator: Carroll, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of Airplane Maneuvers With Special Reference to Angular Velocities (open access)

A Study of Airplane Maneuvers With Special Reference to Angular Velocities

"This investigation was undertaken by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics for the purpose of increasing our knowledge on the behavior of the airplane during various maneuvers and to obtain values of the maximum angular velocities and accelerations in flight. The method consisted in flying a JN4H airplane through various maneuvers while records were being taken of the control position, the air speed, the angular velocity and the acceleration along the Z axis. The results showed that the maximum angular velocity about the X axis of radians per second in a barrel roll" (p. 563).
Date: 1923
Creator: Reid, H. J. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Altitude Effect on Air Speed Indicators - 2 (open access)

The Altitude Effect on Air Speed Indicators - 2

In an investigation described in NACA Technical Report 110, it was shown that under certain conditions, particularly for the relatively low-speed flight of airships, the data obtained were not sufficiently accurate. This report describes an investigation in which the data obtained were sufficiently accurate and complete to enable the viscosity correction to be deduced quantitatively for a number of the air-speed pressure nozzles in common use. The report opens with a discussion of the theory of the performance of air-speed nozzles and of the calibration of the indicators, from which the theory of the altitude correction is developed. Then follows the determination of the performance characteristics of the nozzles and calibration constants used for the indicators. In the latter half of the report, the viscosity correction is computed for the Zahm Pitot-venturi nozzles.
Date: 1923%
Creator: Eaton, H. N. & MacNair, W. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nomenclature for Aeronautics (open access)

Nomenclature for Aeronautics

"This nomenclature for aeronautics was prepared by a special conference on aeronautical nomenclature, composed of representatives of the Army and Navy Air Services, the Air Mail Service, the Bureau of Standards, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, and private life. This report supersedes all previous publications of the committee on this subject. It is published with the intention of securing greater uniformity and accuracy in official documents of the government, and, as far as possible, in technical and other commercial publications" (p. 619).
Date: 1923
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mathematical Equations for Heat Conduction in the Fins of Air-Cooled Engines (open access)

Mathematical Equations for Heat Conduction in the Fins of Air-Cooled Engines

The problem considered in this report is that of reducing actual geometrical area of fin-cooling surface, which is, of course, not uniform in temperature, to equivalent cooling area at one definite temperature, namely, that prevailing on the cylinder wall at the point of attachment of the fin. This makes it possible to treat all the cooling surface as if it were part of the cylinder wall and 100 per cent effective. The quantities involved in the equations are the geometrical dimensions of the fin, thermal conductivity of the material composing it, and the coefficient of surface heat dissipation between the fin and the air streams.
Date: 1923
Creator: Harper, D. R. & Brown, W. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The general efficiency curve for air propellers (open access)

The general efficiency curve for air propellers

This report presents a formula which may be used to obtain a "general efficiency curve" in addition to the well-known maximum efficiency curve. These two curves, when modified somewhat by experimental data, enable performance calculations to be made without detailed knowledge of the propeller. The curves may also be used to estimate the improvement in efficiency due to reduction gearing, or to judge the performance of a new propeller design.
Date: 1923
Creator: Diehl, Walter S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Constant Pressure Bomb (open access)

A Constant Pressure Bomb

"This report describes a new optical method of unusual simplicity and of good accuracy suitable to study the kinetics of gaseous reactions. The device is the complement of the spherical bomb of constant volume, and extends the applicability of the relationship, pv=rt for gaseous equilibrium conditions, to the use of both factors p and v. The method substitutes for the mechanical complications of a manometer placed at some distance from the seat of reaction the possibility of allowing the radiant effects of reaction to record themselves directly upon a sensitive film" (p. 3).
Date: 1923
Creator: Stevens, F. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual Report of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (7th). Administrative Report Including Technical Reports Nos. 111 to 132 (open access)

Annual Report of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (7th). Administrative Report Including Technical Reports Nos. 111 to 132

Report includes the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics letter of submittal to the President, Congressional report, summaries of the committee's activities and research accomplished, and expenditures.
Date: 1923
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
The variation of aerofoil lift and drag coefficients with changes in size and speed (open access)

The variation of aerofoil lift and drag coefficients with changes in size and speed

This report contains the results of an investigation into the effect of changes in size and speed upon aerofoil lift and drag coefficients. Certain empirical limitations to the interchangeability of v and l in the general equation of fluid resistance are pointed out and the existing methods of correcting for scale are criticized. New methods of correcting for scale by means of simple formulae are derived and checked by comparison with test results.
Date: 1923
Creator: Diehl, Walter S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests on Air Propellers in Yaw (open access)

Tests on Air Propellers in Yaw

This report contains the results of tests to determine the thrust (pull) and torque characteristics of air propellers in movement relative to the air in a line oblique to the line of the shaft, and specifically when such angle of obliquity is large, as in the case of helicopter flight with the propeller serving for both sustentation and traction.
Date: 1923
Creator: Durand, W. F. & Lesley, E. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Control in Circling Flight (open access)

Control in Circling Flight

"This investigation was undertaken for the purpose of developing instruments that would record the forces and positions of all three controls, and to obtain data on the behavior of an airplane in turns. All the work was done on a standard rigged JN4H (airplane no. 2 of National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, report no. 70). It was found that the airplane was longitudinally unstable and nose heavy; that it was laterally unstable, probably due to too little dihedral; and that it was directionally unstable, due to insufficient fin area, this last being very serious, for in case of a loss of rudder control the airplane immediately whips into a spin from which there is no way of getting it out" (p. 71).
Date: 1923
Creator: Norton, F. H. & Allen, E. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some New Aerodynamical Relations (open access)

Some New Aerodynamical Relations

This report contains three new relations extending the modern theory of aeronautics. The first part contains a relation between the power absorbed by an aerofoil and the power absorbed by a propeller. In the second part the exactness of the ordinary formula for the induced drag of an aerofoil is examined and the error is determined. In the third part the author shows that for the calculation of the air forces on bodies of considerable volume the imaginary sources and sinks equivalent to the flow around the body can be used in the same way as vortices are used for the calculation of lift and induced drag of wings.
Date: 1923
Creator: Munk, Max M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Controllability and Maneuverability of Airplanes (open access)

Controllability and Maneuverability of Airplanes

This investigation was conducted for the purpose of studying the behavior of the JN4H airplane in free flight under the action of its controls and from this to arrive at satisfactory definitions and coefficients for controllability and maneuverability. The method consisted in recording the angular velocity about the three axes, together with the air speed, control positions, and acceleration.
Date: 1923
Creator: Norton, F. H. & Brown, W. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Air Propeller, Its Strength and Correct Shape (open access)

The Air Propeller, Its Strength and Correct Shape

It is possible to give a propeller such a shape that, under given conditions, viz., a definite speed of revolution and flying speed, the bending stresses in the blades will assume quite an insignificant magnitude.
Date: February 1923
Creator: Dietsius, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library