High-Speed Wind-Tunnel Investigation of a Flying-Boat Hull With High Length-Beam Ratio (open access)

High-Speed Wind-Tunnel Investigation of a Flying-Boat Hull With High Length-Beam Ratio

Report presenting the results of an investigation to determine the effect of Mach number on the aerodynamic characteristics of a flying-boat hull with a high length-beam ratio. Information about the drag coefficients, angles of attack for minimum drag, and longitudinal and directional stability is provided.
Date: June 30, 1948
Creator: Riebe, John M. & Naeseth, Rodger L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics at Transonic Speeds of a Semispan Airplane Model Having a 45 Degree Sweptback Wing and Tail as Obtained by the Transonic-Bump Method (open access)

Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics at Transonic Speeds of a Semispan Airplane Model Having a 45 Degree Sweptback Wing and Tail as Obtained by the Transonic-Bump Method

Report presenting a wind-tunnel investigation using the transonic-bump method to determine the longitudinal stability and control characteristics of a semispan airplane model with a 45 degree sweptback wing and tail at transonic speeds. An increase in the rate of change of the pitching-moment coefficient with lift coefficient at a constant Mach number through the transonic range was noted.
Date: June 30, 1948
Creator: Spearman, M. Leroy
System: The UNT Digital Library
The aerodynamic characteristics throughout the subsonic speed range of a thin, sharp-edged horizontal tail of aspect ratio 4 equipped with a constant-chord elevator (open access)

The aerodynamic characteristics throughout the subsonic speed range of a thin, sharp-edged horizontal tail of aspect ratio 4 equipped with a constant-chord elevator

From Introduction: "Recent investigations have indicated several wing plan forms, wing sections, and wing-body-tail combinations suitable for flight at supersonic speeds. One such lifting surface, a thin, sharp-edged without sweep of aspect ratio 4 and taper ratio 0.5, has been the subject of an investigation in the Ames 12-foot pressure wind tunnel. The aim of the investigation was to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of such a wing plan form throughout the range of subsonic Mach numbers up to 0.94."
Date: June 30, 1949
Creator: Bandettini, Angelo & Reed, Verlin D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability derivatives at supersonic speeds of thin rectangular wings with diagonals ahead of tip Mach lines (open access)

Stability derivatives at supersonic speeds of thin rectangular wings with diagonals ahead of tip Mach lines

The investigation includes steady and accelerated vertical and longitudinal motions and steady rolling, yawing, sideslipping, and pitching for Mach numbers and aspect ratios greater than those for which the Mach line from the leading edge of the tip section intersects the trailing edge of the opposite tip section. The stability derivatives are derived with respect to principal body axes and then transformed to a system of stability axes. Theoretical results are obtained, by means of the linearized theory, for the surface-velocity-potential functions, surface-pressure distributions, and stability derivatives for various motions at supersonic speeds of thin flat rectangular wings without dihedral.
Date: June 30, 1948
Creator: Harmon, Sidney M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Slot-Entry Skirt Extensions on Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Wing Section of the XB-36 Airplane Equipped with a Double Slotted Flap (open access)

Effect of Slot-Entry Skirt Extensions on Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Wing Section of the XB-36 Airplane Equipped with a Double Slotted Flap

"An investigation was made in the Langley two-dimensional low-turbulence tunnel on a wing section for the XB-36 airplane equipped with a double slotted flap to determine the effect on lift and drag of various slot-entry skirt extension. A skirt extension of 0.787 deg. was found to provide the best combination of high maximum lift with flap deflected and law drag with flap retracted. The data showed that the maximum lift at intermediate (20 deg. to 45 deg.) flap deflections was lowered considerably by the slot-entry extension; but at high flap deflections the effect was small" (p. 1).
Date: June 30, 1947
Creator: Cahill, Jones F.
System: The UNT Digital Library