Serial/Series Title

Language

Performance comparison at supersonic speeds of inlets spilling excess flow by means of bow shock, conical shock, or bypass (open access)

Performance comparison at supersonic speeds of inlets spilling excess flow by means of bow shock, conical shock, or bypass

Report presenting a comparison of fixed-geometry, translating-spike, and bypass-inlets on the basis of turbojet- and ramjet-engine performance. Results regarding a comparison of the experimental data and its application to ramjet and turbojet engines are provided.
Date: October 23, 1953
Creator: Allen, J. L. & Beke, Andrew
System: The UNT Digital Library
Internal performance characteristics of variable-throat plug- and vaned-type convergent-divergent nozzles (open access)

Internal performance characteristics of variable-throat plug- and vaned-type convergent-divergent nozzles

Investigation of the internal performance characteristics of three types of variable-throat convergent-divergent nozzles over a wide range of pressure ratios. Only small differences in peak thrust coefficient between the three types of variable-throat convergent-divergent nozzles were obtained.
Date: June 23, 1953
Creator: Krull, H. George; Steffen, Fred W. & Ciepluch, Carl C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influence of end plates on lift and flow field of a canard-type control surface at a Mach number of 2.00 (open access)

Influence of end plates on lift and flow field of a canard-type control surface at a Mach number of 2.00

"The influence of triangular-shaped end plates on the lift and the flow field of a canard-type control surface mounted on a symmetrical fuselage was investigated in the Lewis 8- by 6-foot supersonic wind tunnel at a Mach number of 2.00, body angle of attack of 2 degrees, and control-surface deflection angles of 3 degrees, 6 degrees, 8 degrees, and 10 degrees. The investigation demonstrated that the addition of end plates to a canard-type control surface increased its lift and rearranged the single vortex into a two-vortex system. Perforating the end plates reduced these effects and resulted in a decrease in lift and a change in the flow-field characteristics" (p. 1).
Date: March 23, 1953
Creator: Wise, George A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of ethyl ether as an ignition aid for turbojet engine fuels (open access)

Evaluation of ethyl ether as an ignition aid for turbojet engine fuels

Report presenting an investigation to determine the effectiveness of ethyl ether as an ignition aid for low-volatility turbojet-engine fuels. The minimum spark engines required to ignite a single J33 combustor over a range of altitude inlet-air pressures and flow rates with several fuel blends are provided.
Date: October 23, 1953
Creator: Jonash, Edmund R. & Foster, Hampton H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Force and pressure recovery characteristics at supersonic speeds of a conical spike inlet with a bypass discharging from the top or bottom of the diffuser in an axial direction (open access)

Force and pressure recovery characteristics at supersonic speeds of a conical spike inlet with a bypass discharging from the top or bottom of the diffuser in an axial direction

Force and pressure-recovery characteristics of a nacelle-type conical-spike inlet with a fixed-area bypass located in the top or bottom of the diffuser are presented for flight Mach numbers of 1.6, 1.8, and 2.0 for angles of attack from 0 degrees to 9 degrees. Top or bottom location of the bypass did not have significant effects on diffuser pressure-recovery, bypass mass-flow ratio, or drag coefficient over the range of angles of attack, flight Mach numbers, and stable engine mass-flow ratios investigated. A larger stable subcritical operating range was obtained with the bypass on the bottom at angles of attack from 3 degrees to 9 degrees at a flight Mach number of 2.0. At a flight Mach number of 2.0, the discharge of 14 percent of the critical mass flow of the inlet by means of a bypass increased the drag only one-fifth of the additive drag that would result for equivalent spillage behind an inlet normal shock without significant reductions in diffuser pressure recovery.
Date: March 23, 1953
Creator: Allen, J. L. & Beke, Andrew
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altitude evaluation of several afterburner design variables on a J47-GE-17 turbojet engine (open access)

Altitude evaluation of several afterburner design variables on a J47-GE-17 turbojet engine

From Introduction: "The investigation reported herein presents information on design factors and modifications of the production afterburner for the J47-GE-17 turbojet engine designed for medium temperature operation. The present report is concerned only with the afterburner performance and operating characteristics.Altitude-starting characteristics of two of the configurations in this report are discussed in reference 1."
Date: October 23, 1953
Creator: Braithwaite, Willis M.; Walker, Curtis L. & Sivo, Joseph N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental investigation of physical and combustion properties of several residual fuel oils and magnesium - fuel-oil slurries in a ram-jet-type combustor (open access)

Experimental investigation of physical and combustion properties of several residual fuel oils and magnesium - fuel-oil slurries in a ram-jet-type combustor

Report presenting an experimental investigation using a 1 7/8-inch diameter burner to determine the suitability of residual fuel oils as carriers in magnesium slurries. Four residual fuel oils with varying viscosities were investigated by themselves and in slurries of 50 percent magnesium. Results regarding the settling characteristics, blow-out velocity, and combustion efficiency are provided.
Date: June 23, 1953
Creator: Cook, Preston N., Jr.; Evans, Vernida E. & Lezberg, Erwin A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation at Low Speed of the Pitching Stability Derivatives of a 1/9-Scale Powered Model of the Convair XFY-1 Vertically Rising Airplane, TED No. NACA DE 373 (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation at Low Speed of the Pitching Stability Derivatives of a 1/9-Scale Powered Model of the Convair XFY-1 Vertically Rising Airplane, TED No. NACA DE 373

An experimental investigation has been conducted in the Langley stability tunnel at low speed to determine the pitching stability derivatives of a 1/9-scale powered model of the Convair XFY-1 vertically rising airplane. Effects of thrust coefficient, control deflections, and propeller blade angle were investigated. The tests were made through an angle-of-attack range from about -4deg to 29deg, and the thrust coefficient range was from 0 to 0.7. In order to expedite distribution of these data, no analysis of the data has been prepared for this paper.
Date: July 23, 1953
Creator: Queijo, M. J.; Wolhart, Walter D. & Fletcher, H. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library