43 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Tank Tests of Two Floats for High-Speed Seaplanes (open access)

Tank Tests of Two Floats for High-Speed Seaplanes

"At the request of the Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy Department, a study of the design of floats especially suitable for use on high-speed seaplanes was undertaken in the N.A.C.A. tank. This note give the results obtained in tests of one-quarter full-size models of two floats for high-speed seaplanes. One was a float similar to that used on the Macchi high-speed seaplane which competed in the 1926 Schneider Trophy races, and the other a float designed at the N.A.C.A. tank in an attempt to improve on the water performance of the Macchi float. The model of the latter showed considerably better water performance than the model of the Macchi float" (p. 1).
Date: November 1933
Creator: Bell, Joe W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Three Methods for Calculating the Compressive Strength of Flat and Slightly Curved Sheet and Stiffener Combinations (open access)

Comparison of Three Methods for Calculating the Compressive Strength of Flat and Slightly Curved Sheet and Stiffener Combinations

"This report gives a comparison of the accuracy of the three methods for calculating the compressive strength of flat sheet and stiffener combinations such as occur in stressed-skin or monocoque structures for aircraft. Of the three methods based upon various assumptions with regard to the interaction of sheet and stiffener, the method based upon mutual action of the stiffener and an effective width as a column gave the best agreement with the results of the tests. An investigation of the effect of small curvature resulted in the conclusion that the compressive strength of the curved panels is, for all practical purposes, equal to the strength of flat panels except for thick sheet where non-uniform curvature throughout the length may cause the strength of the curved panel to be 10 to 15 percent less than that of a corresponding flat panel" (p. 1).
Date: March 1933
Creator: Lundquist, Eugene E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of stabilizer location upon pitching and yawing moments in spins as shown by tests with the spinning balance (open access)

Effect of stabilizer location upon pitching and yawing moments in spins as shown by tests with the spinning balance

Tests were made with the spinning balance in a 5-foot wind tunnel to study the effect of stabilizer location upon the pitching and yawing moments given by the tail surfaces in spinning attitudes. The tests revealed that the horizontal surfaces, when in a normal location, seriously reduced the effectiveness of the fin and rudder, particularly at angles of attack of 50 degrees or more. The tests also revealed that a more forward or more rearward location gave no consistent or decided improvement; that a lower location greatly increased the shielding so that the yawing moment from the combination was in general less than that given by the bare fuselage; and that a higher location decreased the shielding and gave a favorable interference effect, particularly at the high angles of attack. Additional results regarding the stabilizer and the elevator are given.
Date: November 1933
Creator: Bamber, M. J. & Zimmerman, C. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Aerodynamic Effect of a Retractable Landing Gear (open access)

The Aerodynamic Effect of a Retractable Landing Gear

"Tests were conducted in the N.A.C.A. full scale wind tunnel at the request of the Army Air Corps to determine the effect of retractable landing gear openings in the bottom surface of a wing upon the characteristics of a Lockheed Altair airplane. The tests were extended to include the determination of the lift and drag characteristics throughout the angle-of-attack range with the landing gear both retracted and extended. Covering the wheel openings in the wing with sheet metal when the wheels were extended reduced the drag only 2 percent at a lift coefficient of 1.0, which was assumed for the take-off condition" (p. 1).
Date: March 1933
Creator: DeFrance, Smith J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind Tunnel Research Comparing Lateral Control Devices, Particularly at High Angles of Attack 8: Straight and Skewed Ailerons on Wings With Rounded Tips (open access)

Wind Tunnel Research Comparing Lateral Control Devices, Particularly at High Angles of Attack 8: Straight and Skewed Ailerons on Wings With Rounded Tips

Tests showed the effect of the ailerons and the tip shapes on the general performance of the wing, as well as on the lateral control and stability characteristics. The hinge moments were not measured but the approximate values are given in the first report of the series.
Date: February 1933
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Shortal, Joseph A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect on lift, drag, and spinning characteristics of sharp leading edges on airplane wings (open access)

The effect on lift, drag, and spinning characteristics of sharp leading edges on airplane wings

An investigation with special reference to auto rotation and spinning was conducted in two wind tunnels and in flight to find the aerodynamic effects of adding a sharp leading edge to a wing sector.
Date: February 1933
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Scudder, Nathan F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of aileron displacement on wing characteristics (open access)

Effect of aileron displacement on wing characteristics

The effect of aileron displacement on wing characteristics has been investigated for the Clark Y and the U.S.A. 27 wing sections equipped with rectangular ailerons. The airfoils, rectangular in plan, and having a 10 inch chord and 60 inch span, were mounted on a model fuselage.
Date: February 1933
Creator: Heald, R. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Split Trailing-Edge Wing Flaps on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Parasol Monoplane (open access)

The Effect of Split Trailing-Edge Wing Flaps on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Parasol Monoplane

"This paper presents the results of tests conducted in the N.A.C.A. full-scale wind tunnel on a Fairchild F-22 airplane equipped with a special wing having split trailing-edge flaps. The flaps extended over the outer 90 percent of the wing span, and were of the fixed-hinge type having a width equal to 20 percent of the wing chord. The results show that with a flap setting of 59 degrees the maximum lift of the wing was increased 42 percent, and that the flaps increased the range of available gliding angles from 2.7 degrees to 7.0 degrees" (p. 1).
Date: November 1933
Creator: Wallace, Rudolf N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Aerodynamic Characteristics of Airfoils as Affected by Surface Roughness (open access)

The Aerodynamic Characteristics of Airfoils as Affected by Surface Roughness

"The effect on airfoil characteristics of surface roughness of varying degrees and types at different locations on an airfoil was investigated at high values of the Reynolds number in a variable density wind tunnel. Tests were made on a number of National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) 0012 airfoil models on which the nature of the surface was varied from a rough to a very smooth finish. The effect on the airfoil characteristics of varying the location of a rough area in the region of the leading edge was also investigated" (p. 1).
Date: April 1933
Creator: Hooker, Ray W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind tunnel research comparing lateral control devices, particularly at high angles of attack 11: various floating tip ailerons on both rectangular and tapered wings (open access)

Wind tunnel research comparing lateral control devices, particularly at high angles of attack 11: various floating tip ailerons on both rectangular and tapered wings

Discussed here are a series of systematic tests being conducted to compare different lateral control devices with particular reference to their effectiveness at high angles of attack. The present tests were made with six different forms of floating tip ailerons of symmetrical section. The tests showed the effect of the various ailerons on the general performance characteristics of the wing, and on the lateral controllability and stability characteristics. In addition, the hinge moments were measured for the most interesting cases.
Date: May 1933
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Harris, Thomas A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect on Engine Performance of Change in Jacket-Water Outlet Temperature (open access)

The Effect on Engine Performance of Change in Jacket-Water Outlet Temperature

Tests made on a Curtiss D-12 engine in the Altitude Laboratory at the Bureau of Standards show the following effects on engine performance of change in jacket-water outlet temperature: 1) Friction at all altitudes is a linear function of the jacket-water temperature, decreasing with increasing temperature. 2) The brake horsepower below an altitude of about 9,000 feet decreases, and at higher altitudes increases, with jacket-water temperature. 3) The brake specific fuel consumption tends to decrease, at all altitudes, with increasing jacket-water temperature. 4) The percentage change in brake power output is roughly equal to the algebraic sum of the percentage change in volumetric efficiency and mechanical efficiency.
Date: November 1933
Creator: Garlock, E. A. & Ellis, Greer
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full-Scale Wind-Tunnel Research on Tail Buffeting and Wing-Fuselage Interference of a Low-Wing Monoplane (open access)

Full-Scale Wind-Tunnel Research on Tail Buffeting and Wing-Fuselage Interference of a Low-Wing Monoplane

Some preliminary results of full scale wind tunnel testing to determine the best means of reducing the tail buffeting and wing-fuselage interference of a low-wing monoplane are given. Data indicating the effects of an engine cowling, fillets, auxiliary airfoils of short span, reflexes trailing edge, propeller slipstream, and various combinations of these features are included. The best all-round results were obtained by the use of fillets together with the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) cowling.
Date: May 1933
Creator: Hood, Manley J. & White, James A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Rivet Heads on the Characteristics of a 6 by 36 Foot Clark Y Metal Airfoil (open access)

The Effect of Rivet Heads on the Characteristics of a 6 by 36 Foot Clark Y Metal Airfoil

"An investigation was conducted in the N.A.C.A. full-scale wind tunnel to determine the effects of exposed rivet heads on the aerodynamic characteristics of a metal-covered 6 by 36 foot Clark Y airfoil. Lead punching simulating 1/8 inch rivet heads were attached in full-span rows at a pitch of 1 inch at various chord positions. Tests were made at velocities varying from 40 to 120 miles per hour to investigate the scale effect" (p. 1).
Date: May 1933
Creator: Dearborn, Clinton H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effects of slots and flaps on lateral control of a low-wing monoplane as determined in flight (open access)

The effects of slots and flaps on lateral control of a low-wing monoplane as determined in flight

This paper presents the results of flight tests made to determine the effect of slots and flaps on the lateral control of a low-wing monoplane. Maximum angular accelerations in roll and yaw produced by sudden application of the ailerons and maximum accelerations in yaw produced by sudden application of the rudder during gliding flight were recorded for the following wing arrangements: (a) no auxiliary device; (b) full-span slots; (c) plain flaps; (d) flaps and full-span slots; (e) wing-tip slots. Rolling- and yawing-moment coefficients were derived from the accelerations.
Date: November 1933
Creator: Soulé, Hartley A. & Wetmore, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Strength Tests of Thin-Walled Duralumin Cylinders in Pure Bending (open access)

Strength Tests of Thin-Walled Duralumin Cylinders in Pure Bending

"This report is the third of a series presenting the results of strengths tests on thin-walled cylinders and truncated cones of circular and elliptic section; it includes the results obtained from pure bending tests on 58 thin-walled duralumin cylinders of circular section with ends clamped to rigid bulkheads. The tests show that the stress on the extreme fiber at failure as calculated by the ordinary theory of bending is from 30 to 80 percent greater than the compressive stress at failure for thin-walled cylinders in compression. The tests also show that length/radius ratio has no consistent effect upon the bending strength and that the size of the wrinkles that form on the compression half of a cylinder in bending is approximately equal to the size of the wrinkles that form in the complete circumference of a cylinder of the same dimensions in compression" (p. 1).
Date: December 1933
Creator: Lundquist, Eugene E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Complete Tank Test of a Model of Flying-Boat Hull - N.A.C.A. Model 16 (open access)

A Complete Tank Test of a Model of Flying-Boat Hull - N.A.C.A. Model 16

"A model of a 2-step flying-boat hull, of the type generally used in England, was tested according to the complete method described in the N.A.C.A. Technical Note No. 464. The lines of this model were taken from offsets given by Mr. William Munro in Flight, May 29, 1931. The data cover the range of loads, speeds, and trim angles that may be of use in applying the hull form to the design of any seaplane. The results are reduced to nondimensional form to aid application to design problems and facilitate comparison with the performance of other hulls" (p. 1).
Date: September 1933
Creator: Shoemaker, James M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The N.A.C.A. Combustion Chamber Gas-Sampling Valve and Some Preliminary Test Results (open access)

The N.A.C.A. Combustion Chamber Gas-Sampling Valve and Some Preliminary Test Results

"A gas sampling valve of the inertia-operated type was designed for procuring samples of the gases in the combustion chamber of internal combustion engines at identical points in successive cycles so that the analysis of the gas samples thus procured may aid in the study of the process of combustion. The operation of the valve is described. The valve was used to investigate the CO2 content of gases taken from the quiescent combustion chamber of a high speed compression-ignition engine when operating with two different multiple-orifice fuel injection nozzles" (p. 1).
Date: March 1933
Creator: Spanogle, J. A. & Buckley, E. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Partial-Span Split Flaps on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Clark Y Wing (open access)

The Effect of Partial-Span Split Flaps on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Clark Y Wing

"Aerodynamic force tests were made in the N.A.C.A. 7 by 10 foot wind tunnel on a model Clark Y wing with a 20 percent chord split flap deflected 60 degrees downward. The tests were made to determine the effect of partial-span split flaps, located at various positions along the wing span on the aerodynamic characteristics of the wing-and-flap combination. The different lengths and locations of the flaps were obtained by cutting off portions of a full-span flap, first from the tips and then from the center. The results are given in the form of curves of lift, drag, and center of pressure" (p. 1).
Date: September 1933
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experiments With a Counter-Propeller (open access)

Experiments With a Counter-Propeller

This note describes tests made at Stanford University on a four-blade fixed counter-propeller in combination with a two-blade rotating propeller. It is shown that the efficiency of the normal form, well-designed air propeller can be increased about two percent over the full working range by the addition of fixed counter-propeller blades.
Date: March 1933
Creator: Lesley, E. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Research Comparing Lateral Control Devices, Particularly at High Angles of Attack 9: Tapered Wings With Ordinary Ailerons (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Research Comparing Lateral Control Devices, Particularly at High Angles of Attack 9: Tapered Wings With Ordinary Ailerons

Tests were made with ordinary flap-type ailerons on two wings with different amounts of taper, one medium and the other extreme. On each wing both medium sized tapered ailerons and short wide tapered ailerons were tested.
Date: February 1933
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Wenzinger, Carl J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mercerization of Cotton for Strength With Special Reference to Aircraft Cloth (open access)

Mercerization of Cotton for Strength With Special Reference to Aircraft Cloth

The object of the present investigation was to determine the conditions for mercerizing cotton yarn to obtain the maximum strength for a given weight. Apparatus for controlling the variables was built and yarns were mercerized with it under systematically varied conditions of tension, time, temperature, and concentration of caustic soda. The strongest conclusion to be drawn from this work is that the strongest mercerized yarn of a given count from a given quality of cotton is obtained under certain conditions specified in this report.
Date: February 1933
Creator: Wilkie, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of factors affecting the steady spin of an airplane (open access)

A study of factors affecting the steady spin of an airplane

Data from wind-tunnel tests on a model of the NY-1 airplane were used in a study of the effect on the steady spin of a number of factors considered to be important. The factors were of two classes, mass distribution effects and aerodynamic effects. The study indicated that mass extended along the longitudinal axis has no detrimental effect or is even slightly beneficial, mass extended along the lateral axis is detrimental if the airplane spins with the inner wing tip far down, and mass extended along the normal axis, if of considerable magnitude, has a strong favorable effect. The aerodynamic effects considered in terms of rolling, pitching, and yawing moments added to those for a conventional airplane showed that added stable rolling moment could contribute favorable effect on the spin only in decreasing the amount of inward sideslip required for equilibrium. Negative pitching moment of moderate magnitude has unfavorable effect on a high-angle-of-attack spin, and stable yawing moment has pronounced beneficial effect on the spin. Experimental data from various sources were available to verify nearly all the deductions resulting from the study of the curves. When these results were considered for the purpose of deciding upon the best means to …
Date: August 1933
Creator: Scudder, Nathan F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind tunnel research comparing lateral control devices, particularly at high angles of attack 10: various control devices on a wing with a fixed auxiliary airfoil (open access)

Wind tunnel research comparing lateral control devices, particularly at high angles of attack 10: various control devices on a wing with a fixed auxiliary airfoil

Results are given of a series of systemic tests comparing lateral control devices with particular reference to their effectiveness at high angles of attack. These tests were made with two sizes of ordinary ailerons and different sizes of spoilers on a Clark Y wing model having a narrow auxiliary airfoil fixed ahead and above the leading edge, the chords of the main and auxiliary airfoils being parallel. In addition, the auxiliary airfoil itself was given angular deflection. The purpose was to provide rolling moments for lateral control.
Date: March 1933
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Noyes, Richard W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Summary of Design Formulas for Beams Having Thin Webs in Diagonal Tension (open access)

A Summary of Design Formulas for Beams Having Thin Webs in Diagonal Tension

"This report presents an explanation of the fundamental principles and a summary of the essential formulas for the design of diagonal-tension field beams, i.e. beams with very thin webs, as developed by Professor Wagner of Germany" (p. 1).
Date: August 1933
Creator: Kuhn, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library