Fundamentals of the Control of Gas-Turbine Power Plants for Aircraft, Part 3: Control of Jet Engines (open access)

Fundamentals of the Control of Gas-Turbine Power Plants for Aircraft, Part 3: Control of Jet Engines

"The basic principles of the control of TL engines are developed on the basis of a quantitative investigation of the behavior of these behavior under various operating conditions with particular consideration of the simplifications permissible in each case. Various possible means of control of jet engines are suggested and are illustrated by schematic designs" (p. 1).
Date: May 1947
Creator: Kühl, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Development of the Two-Stroke Engine 2 - Design Features (open access)

Recent Development of the Two-Stroke Engine 2 - Design Features

"Completing the first paper dealing with charging methods and arrangements, the present paper discusses the design forms of two-stroke engines. Features which largely influence piston running are: (a) The shape and surface condition of the sliding parts. (b) The cylinder and piston materials. (c) Heat conditions in the piston, and lubrication. There is little essential difference between four-stroke and two-stroke engines with ordinary pistons" (p. 1).
Date: May 1945
Creator: Zeman, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests on Various Types of Dive Brakes Mounted in Proximity of the Leading Edge of the Wing (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests on Various Types of Dive Brakes Mounted in Proximity of the Leading Edge of the Wing

"The present report is concerned with a series of tests on a model airplane fitted with four types of dive flaps of various shapes, positions, and incidence located near the leading edge of the wing (from 5 to 20 percent of the wing chord). Tests were also made on a stub airfoil fitted with a ventral dive (located at 8 percent of the wing chord). The hinge moments of the dive flaps were measured" (p. 1).
Date: May 1949
Creator: Lattanzi, Bernardino & Bellante, Erno
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of the Acceleration of Elongated Bodies of Revolution Upon the Resistance in a Compressible Flow (open access)

Effect of the Acceleration of Elongated Bodies of Revolution Upon the Resistance in a Compressible Flow

The problem of the motion of an elongated body of revolution in an incompressible fluid may, as is known, be solved approximately with the aid of the distribution of sources along the axis of the body. In determining the velocity field, the question of whether the body moves uniformly or with an acceleration is no factor in the problem. The presence of acceleration must be taken into account in determining the pressures acting on the body. The resistance of the body arising from the accelerated motion may be computed either directly on the basis of these pressures or with the aid of the so-called associated masses (inertia coefficients). A different condition holds in the case of the motion of bodies in a compressible gas. In this case the finite velocity of sound must be taken into account.
Date: May 1949
Creator: Frankl, F. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test Report on Three- and Six-Component Measurements on a Series of Tapered Wings of Small Aspect Ratio (Partial Report: Trapezoidal Wing) (open access)

Test Report on Three- and Six-Component Measurements on a Series of Tapered Wings of Small Aspect Ratio (Partial Report: Trapezoidal Wing)

The present report, which forms the first of six articles on experiments with airfoils of aspect ratio from 1 to 3 and various planforms, deals with the three- and six-component measurements made on the trapezoidal wing series in the 2.15 x 3-meter wind tunnel of the DVL at the request of the Henschel Aircraft Company.
Date: May 1949
Creator: Lange & Wacke
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flat Plate Cascades at Supersonic Speed (open access)

Flat Plate Cascades at Supersonic Speed

A brief review of exact two-dimensional supersonic flow theory and Ackeret's linearized theory are first presented. The lift and drag coefficients of a cascade of flat plates are calculated exactly and compared to those obtained using the linearized theory. The forces on the cascade are determined for unsteady inlet flow. The flat plate cascade theory is extended to compute the efficiency of a supersonic propeller with friction and finite blade thickness.
Date: May 1956
Creator: El Badrawy, Rashad M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gas Motion in a Local Supersonic Region and Conditions of Potential-Flow Breakdown (open access)

Gas Motion in a Local Supersonic Region and Conditions of Potential-Flow Breakdown

"For a certain Mach number of the oncoming flow, the local velocity first reaches the value of the local velocity of sound (M = 1) at some point on the surface of the body located within the flow. This Mach number is designated the critical Mach number M(sub cr). By increasing the flow velocity, a supersonic local region is formed bounded by the body contour and the line of transition from subsonic to supersonic velocity. As is shown by observations with the Toepler apparatus, at a certain flow Mach number M > M(sub cr) a shock wave is formed near the body that closes the local supersonic region from behind" (p. 1).
Date: May 1949
Creator: Nikolskii, A. A. & Taganov, G. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discussion of problems relating to the safety of aviation. Part 1 (open access)

Discussion of problems relating to the safety of aviation. Part 1

The object of the present treatise is to examine the present status of aerial safety and to review the efforts of various commissions to promote safety.
Date: May 1928
Creator: Sabatier, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discussion of problems relating to the safety of aviation. Part 2 (open access)

Discussion of problems relating to the safety of aviation. Part 2

This report focuses on structural strength and engine design in building and designing safer aircraft.
Date: May 1928
Creator: Sabatier, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wheel Brakes and Their Application to Aircraft (open access)

Wheel Brakes and Their Application to Aircraft

"The advantages to be gained from braking have not been ignored, and in the search for a suitable method many schemes have been suggested and tried. Some of the methods discussed in this paper include: 1) increasing the height of the landing gear; 2) air brakes of various forms; 3) sprags on tail skid and axle; and 4) wheel brakes. This report focuses on the design of wheel brakes and wheel brake controls" (p. 1).
Date: May 1928
Creator: Dowty, G. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Strength of Box Type Fuselages (open access)

On the Strength of Box Type Fuselages

The present investigation relates to a box-type fuselage with sides consisting of thin smooth sheet metal, stiffened by longitudinal members riveted to the flanged channel-section bulkheads or transverse frames and to the semicircular corrugated corner stiffenings. The results obtained in this particular case can be applied to a great number of similar structures.
Date: May 1929
Creator: Mathar, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials and Methods of Construction in Light Structures (open access)

Materials and Methods of Construction in Light Structures

Different methods of constructing light airplanes are presented with a view toward increasing production and efficiency.
Date: May 1929
Creator: Rohrbach, Adolf
System: The UNT Digital Library