Serial/Series Title

Language

Effects of a J34 Turbojet Engine on Supersonic Diffuser Performance (open access)

Effects of a J34 Turbojet Engine on Supersonic Diffuser Performance

Report presenting testing of a translating cone inlet with a variable bypass at Mach numbers 1.6, 1.8, and 2.0 with both a choked exit plug and a J34 turbojet engine. The main difference between the two options was increased inlet subcritical stability with the engine. Results regarding basic diffuser performance, inlet stability, buzz amplitude and frequency, and diffuser-exit profiles are provided.
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Beheim, Milton A. & Englert, Gerald W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of an Adjustable Supersonic Inlet on the Performance Up to Mach Number 2.0 of a J34 Turbojet Engine (open access)

Effect of an Adjustable Supersonic Inlet on the Performance Up to Mach Number 2.0 of a J34 Turbojet Engine

"A J34 turbojet engine was investigated at free-stream Mach numbers of 0.12 and 1.6 to 2.0 to determine the effect of supersonic inlet operation on engine performance. With the exception of ideal jet thrust, the use of generalized engine parameters correlated the engine data satisfactorily when the exit nozzle was choked. Large total-pressure distortions did not affect compressor efficiency" (p. 1).
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Beke, Andrew; Englert, Gerald & Beheim, Milton
System: The UNT Digital Library
Static Lateral-Directional Stability Characteristics of Five Contemporary Airplane Models From Wind-Tunnel Tests at High Subsonic and Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Static Lateral-Directional Stability Characteristics of Five Contemporary Airplane Models From Wind-Tunnel Tests at High Subsonic and Supersonic Speeds

Memorandum presenting the static lateral-directional stability characteristics of several airplane models recently investigated which cover many of the geometric arrangements of high-speed airplane components of current interest. The results are limited to the most pertinent aerodynamic phenomena contributing to the lateral-directional characteristics of each airplane type. Results for five different models are provided.
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Smith, Willard G. & Ball, Louis H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Aerodynamic Characteristics of Various Configurations of a Revised 1/22-Scale Model of the Republic F-105 Airplane at Mach Numbers of 1.41 and 2.01 (open access)

Longitudinal Aerodynamic Characteristics of Various Configurations of a Revised 1/22-Scale Model of the Republic F-105 Airplane at Mach Numbers of 1.41 and 2.01

Report presenting an investigation of a model of the Republic F-105 airplane to determine the static longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics of a revised configuration. The revisions included a lengthened fuselage, a relocated canopy, a contoured fuselage afterbody, a ventral fin, and an enlarged vertical tail. Results regarding the effect of stores, effect of dive-brake flaps, effect of forebody modifications, gun blisters, and duct air bleed, and a comparison of the modified model with the original are provided.
Date: May 4, 1956
Creator: Foster, Gerald V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Static lateral-directional stability characteristics of five contemporary airplane models from wind-tunnel tests at high subsonic and supersonic speeds (open access)

Static lateral-directional stability characteristics of five contemporary airplane models from wind-tunnel tests at high subsonic and supersonic speeds

Report presenting the static lateral-directional stability characteristics of several airplane models that cover many of the geometric arrangements of high-speed airplane components of current interest. The results are presented for a subsonic Mach number of 0.9 and for supersonic Mach numbers ranging from 1.2 to 1.9. Five different models are described and tested.
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Smith, Willard G. & Ball, Louis H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of a continuous normal-shock positioning control on the bypass of a supersonic inlet in combination with the J34 turbojet engine (open access)

Investigation of a continuous normal-shock positioning control on the bypass of a supersonic inlet in combination with the J34 turbojet engine

Report presenting an investigation of a normal-shock positioning control which utilized the bypass of a supersonic inlet to set the required air flow for a J34 turbojet engines to Mach number 2.0 in the supersonic tunnel. Continuous control without oscillations was obtained by use of the pressure signal from the small static probe. Calculated response time generally agreed with measured values.
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Wilcox, Fred A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Static Shear Strength of 2117-T4 (A17S-T4) Aluminum-Alloy Rivets at Elevated Temperatures (open access)

Static Shear Strength of 2117-T4 (A17S-T4) Aluminum-Alloy Rivets at Elevated Temperatures

Report presenting static single shear tests of 3/16-inch-diameter 2117-T4 (A17S-T4) aluminum-alloy rivets at elevated temperatures. The maximum temperature tested was 800 degrees Fahrenheit and the time at temperature prior to testing range from 1/2 hour to 720 hours.
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Dewalt, W. J. & Bogardus, K. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Experimental Study at High Subsonic Speeds of Several Tail Configurations on a Model with an Unswept Wing (open access)

An Experimental Study at High Subsonic Speeds of Several Tail Configurations on a Model with an Unswept Wing

Memorandum presenting an investigation in the 7- by 10-foot tunnel of the static longitudinal and lateral stability characteristics of a model with an unswept wing and several different tail arrangements. The shapes tested include a Y-tail, a cruciform tail, and a more conventional T-tail. Results regarding wing-body characteristics, effects of stabilizer incidence on lateral characteristics, T-tail characteristics, Y-tail characteristics, X-tails, estimated tail contribution, and characteristics referred to the body-axis system are provided.
Date: April 4, 1956
Creator: Sleeman, William C., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of Shadowgraph Technique in the Analysis of the Performance of Two Supersonic Axial-Flow Compressor Rotors Operating Over a Mean Radius Relative Inlet Mach Number Range of 0.85 to 1.7 (open access)

Use of Shadowgraph Technique in the Analysis of the Performance of Two Supersonic Axial-Flow Compressor Rotors Operating Over a Mean Radius Relative Inlet Mach Number Range of 0.85 to 1.7

Report presenting shadowgraphs of flow patterns through the blade passage and ahead of a compressor rotor by shining parallel light rays approximately radially onto a rotor hub and upstream inner ring, which was painted white to serve as a screen. The flow patterns were used in conjunction with measured data to analyze the performance of two axial-flow supersonic compressors over a range of Mach numbers in Freon-12. The shadowgraph was found to be a useful tool for comparing the flow patterns within rotors and cascade sections and improving compressor analysis.
Date: April 4, 1956
Creator: Goldberg, Theodore J. & Sterrett, James R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Effects of a Heated Propulsive Jet on the Pressure Distribution Along a Fuselage Overhang (open access)

Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Effects of a Heated Propulsive Jet on the Pressure Distribution Along a Fuselage Overhang

Report presenting pressure-distribution data on fuselage surfaces which extended downstream of a jet exit and were subject to the influence of a heated propulsive jet. Testing occurred at a range of free-stream Mach numbers, jet pressure ratios, and jet-exit temperatures.
Date: April 4, 1956
Creator: Cornette, Elden S. & Ward, Donald H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An experimental investigation of a flat ram-jet engine on a helicopter rotor (open access)

An experimental investigation of a flat ram-jet engine on a helicopter rotor

Report presenting the propulsive and aerodynamic characteristics of a flat ramjet engine suitable for use on a helicopter rotor and compared with previous tests of an equivalent engine with a circular cross section. The results indicate that the flat engine has higher values of propulsive thrust plus power-off drag than the circular engine. The power-off and drag characteristics indicate that the flat engine has lift-drag ratios about 3 times those obtained with the circular engine.
Date: January 4, 1956
Creator: Powell, Robert D., Jr. & Shivers, James P.
System: The UNT Digital Library