Measurements of the Longitudinal Stability and Control and Stalling Characteristics of a North American P-51H Airplane (AAF No. 4-64164) (open access)

Measurements of the Longitudinal Stability and Control and Stalling Characteristics of a North American P-51H Airplane (AAF No. 4-64164)

From Summary: "Flight tests have been made to determine the longitudinal stability and control and stalling characteristics of a North American P-51H airplane. The results indicate that the airplane has satisfactory longitudinal stability in all the flight conditions tested at normal loadings up to 25,000 feet altitude. At Mach numbers above 0.7, the elevator push force required for longitudinal trim decreased somewhat because of compressibility effects."
Date: March 23, 1948
Creator: Kraft, Christopher C., Jr. & Reeder, J. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ditching Tests of a 1/18-Scale Model of the Lockheed Constellation Airplane (open access)

Ditching Tests of a 1/18-Scale Model of the Lockheed Constellation Airplane

"Tests were made of a 1/18-scale dynamically similar model of the Lockheed Constellation airplane to investigate its ditching characteristics and proper ditching technique. Scale-strength bottoms were used to reproduce probable damage to the fuselage. The model was landed in calm water at the Langley tank no. 2 monorail. Various landing attitudes, speeds, and fuselage configuration were simulated" (p. 1).
Date: November 23, 1948
Creator: Fisher, Lloyd J. & Morris, Garland J.
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
The Static-Pressure Error of a Wing Airspeed Installation of the McDonnell XF-88 Airplane in Dives to Transonic Speeds (open access)

The Static-Pressure Error of a Wing Airspeed Installation of the McDonnell XF-88 Airplane in Dives to Transonic Speeds

"Measurements were made, in dives to transonic speeds, of the static-pressure position error at a distance of one chord ahead of the McDonnell XF-88 airplane. The airplane incorporates a wing which is swept back 35 deg along the 0.22 chord line and utilizes a 65-series airfoil with a 9-percent-thick section perpendicular to the 0.25-chord line. The section in the stream direction is approximately 8-percent thick. Data up to a Mach number of about 0.97 were obtained within an airplane normal-force-coefficient range from about 0.05 to about 0.68" (p. 1).
Date: September 23, 1949
Creator: Goodman, Harold R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Yawed-Landing Investigation of a Model of the Convair Y2-2 Airplane, TED No. NACA DE 363 (open access)

Yawed-Landing Investigation of a Model of the Convair Y2-2 Airplane, TED No. NACA DE 363

"A model of the Convair Y2-2 airplane was tested in Langley tank no. 2 to determine whether satisfactory stability in yawed landings was possible with a certain ventral fin. Free-body landings were made in smooth and rough water at two speeds and two rates of descent with the model yawed 15 degrees. The behavior of the model was determined by visual observations and from motion-picture records" (p. 1).
Date: August 23, 1951
Creator: Hoffman, Edward L. & Fisher, Lloyd J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-Spinning-Tunnel Investigation of a 1/28-Scale Model of the North American FJ-4 Airplane with External Fuel Tanks, TED No. NACA AD 3112 (open access)

Free-Spinning-Tunnel Investigation of a 1/28-Scale Model of the North American FJ-4 Airplane with External Fuel Tanks, TED No. NACA AD 3112

From Summary: "A supplementary investigation to determine the effect of external fuel tanks on the spin and recovery characteristics of a l/28-scale model of the North American FJ-4 airplane has been conducted in the Langley 20-foot free-spinning tunnel. The model had been extensively tested previously (NACA Research Memorandum SL38A29) and therefore only brief tests were made to evaluate the effect of tank installation."
Date: July 23, 1958
Creator: Healy, Frederick M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cooling Characteristics of the V-1650-7 Engine, 1, Coolant-Flow Distribution, Cylinder Temperatures, and Heat Rejections at Typical Operating Conditions (open access)

Cooling Characteristics of the V-1650-7 Engine, 1, Coolant-Flow Distribution, Cylinder Temperatures, and Heat Rejections at Typical Operating Conditions

From Summary: "An investigation was conducted to determine the coolant-flow distribution, the cylinder temperatures, and the heat rejections of the V-1650-7 engine . The tests were run a t several power levels varying from minimum fuel consumption to war emergency power and at each power level the coolant flows corresponded to the extremes of those likely to be encountered in typical airplane installations, A mixture of 30-percent ethylene glycol and 70-percent water was used as the coolant. The temperature of each cylinder was measured between the exhaust valves, between the intake valves, in the center of the head, on the exhaust-valve guide, at the top of the barrel on the exhaust side, and on each exhaust spark-plug gasket."
Date: May 23, 1947
Creator: Povolny, John H. & Bogdan, Louis J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Static Longitudinal and Lateral Stability and Control Characteristics of a 1/15-Scale Model of the Grumman F9F-9 Airplane at a Mach Number of 1.41 (open access)

Static Longitudinal and Lateral Stability and Control Characteristics of a 1/15-Scale Model of the Grumman F9F-9 Airplane at a Mach Number of 1.41

"An investigation has been conducted in the Langley 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel at a Mach number of 1.41 to determine the static stability and control and drag characteristics of a 1/15-scale model of the Grunman F9F-9 airplane. The effects of alternate fuselage shapes, wing camber, wing fences, and fuselage dive brakes on the aerodynamic characteristics were also investigated. These tests were made at a Reynolds number of 1.96 x l0 (exp 6) based on the wing mean aerodynamic chord of 0.545 foot" (p. 1).
Date: June 23, 1954
Creator: Palazzo, Edward B. & Spearman, M. Leroy
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Speed Longitudinal Stability and Lateral-Control Characteristics of a 0.3-Scale Model of the Republic RF-84F Airplane at a Reynolds Number of 9x10(exp 6) (open access)

Low-Speed Longitudinal Stability and Lateral-Control Characteristics of a 0.3-Scale Model of the Republic RF-84F Airplane at a Reynolds Number of 9x10(exp 6)

From Summary: "An investigation was conducted in the Langley 19-foot pressure tunnel on a 0.3-scale model of the Republic RF-84F airplane to determine modifications which would eliminate the pitch-up that occurred near maximum lift during flight tests of the airplane. The effects of high-lift and stall-control devices, horizontal tail locations, external stores, and various inlets on the longitudinal characteristics of the model were investigated. For the most part, these tests were conducted at a Reynolds number of 9.0 x 10(exp 6) and a Mach number of 0.19. The results indicated that from the standpoint of stability the inlets should possess blunted side bodies. The horizontal tail located at either the highest or lowest position investigated improved the stability of the model."
Date: February 23, 1954
Creator: Bollech, Thomas V. & Kelly, H. Neale
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spatial Burnout in Water Reactors with Nonuniform Startup Distributions of Uranium and Boron (open access)

Spatial Burnout in Water Reactors with Nonuniform Startup Distributions of Uranium and Boron

"Spatial burnout calculations have been made of two types of water moderated cylindrical reactor using boron as a burnable poison to increase reactor life. Specific reactors studied were a version of the Submarine Advanced Reactor (sAR) and a supercritical water reactor (SCW). Burnout characteristics such as reactivity excursion, neutron-flux and heat-generation distributions, and uranium and boron distributions have been determined for core lives corresponding to a burnup of approximately 7 kilograms of fully enriched uranium" (p. 1).
Date: March 23, 1955
Creator: Fox, Thomas A. & Bogart, Donald
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary Results of the Determination of Inlet-Pressure Distortion Effects on Compressor Stall and Altitude Operating Limits of the J57-P-1 Turbojet Engine (open access)

Preliminary Results of the Determination of Inlet-Pressure Distortion Effects on Compressor Stall and Altitude Operating Limits of the J57-P-1 Turbojet Engine

"During an investigation of the J57-P-1 turbojet engine in the Lewis altitude wind tunnel, effects of inlet-flow distortion on engine stall characteristics and operating limits were determined. In addition to a uniform inlet-flow profile, the inlet-pressure distortions imposed included two radial, two circumferential, and one combined radial-circumferential profile. Data were obtained over a range of compressor speeds at an altitude of 50,000 and a flight Mach number of 0.8; in addition, the high- and low-speed engine operating limits were investigated up to the maximum operable altitude" (p. 1).
Date: May 23, 1955
Creator: Wallner, L. E.; Lubick, R. J. & Chelko, L. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altitude-wind-tunnel investigation of operational characteristics of Westinghouse X24C-4B axial flow turbojet engine (open access)

Altitude-wind-tunnel investigation of operational characteristics of Westinghouse X24C-4B axial flow turbojet engine

From Summary: "An investigation has been conducted in the NACA Cleveland altitude wind tunnel to evaluate the operational characteristics of a 3000-pound-thrust axial-flow turbojet engine over a range of simulated altitudes from 2000 to 50,000 feet and simulated flight Mach numbers from 0 to 1.04 throughout the operable range of engine speeds. Operational characteristics investigated include engine operating range, acceleration, deceleration, starting, altitude and flight-Mach-number compensation of the fuel-control system, and operation of the lubrication system at high and low ambient-air temperatures."
Date: November 23, 1948
Creator: Hawkins, W. Kent & Meyer, Carl L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of some wake vortex characteristics of an inclined ogive-cylinder body at Mach number 1.98 (open access)

Investigation of some wake vortex characteristics of an inclined ogive-cylinder body at Mach number 1.98

Report presenting measurements of the pitot-pressure distributions in the flow field, pressure distributions over the body, and downwash distributions through shed vortices for an inclined body of revolution at a free-stream Mach number of 1.98. Results regarding the experimental pressure distributions and vortex positions, vortex strengths computed from experiment, comparisons of theoretical and experimental vortex paths, and comparisons of theoretical and experimental downwash distributions through the body vortices are provided.
Date: August 23, 1955
Creator: Jorgensen, Leland H. & Perkins, Edward W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Taper Ratio on the Longitudinal Characteristics at Mach Numbers From 0.6 to 1.4 of a Wing-Body-Tail Combination Having an Unswept Wing of Aspect Ratio 3 (open access)

Effects of Taper Ratio on the Longitudinal Characteristics at Mach Numbers From 0.6 to 1.4 of a Wing-Body-Tail Combination Having an Unswept Wing of Aspect Ratio 3

Report presenting the results of a wind-tunnel investigation to determine the effects of a variation in wing taper ratio on the longitudinal characteristics of a wing-body combination at a variety of Mach numbers. The wings had an aspect ratio of 3, an unswept midchord line, and an NACA 64A003 profile. Results regarding the lift and pitching-moment characteristics and drag characteristics are provided.
Date: March 23, 1955
Creator: Summers, James L.; Treon, Stuart L. & Graham, Lawrence A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method for evaluating the loads and controllability aspects of the pitch-up problem (open access)

A method for evaluating the loads and controllability aspects of the pitch-up problem

Report presenting a procedure for estimating the range of peak airplane load factors and maneuvering tail loads likely to be experienced in pitch-up maneuvers. Results of computations indicated that though the load factors and maneuvering tail loads were not critical in pitch-up maneuvers at 35,000 feet, they were likely to exceed design levels at 15,200 feet.
Date: August 23, 1955
Creator: Sadoff, Melvin; Matteson, Frederick H. & Havill, C. Dewey
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect on the low-speed aerodynamic characteristics of a 49 degree sweptback wing having an aspect ratio of 3.78 of blowing air over the trailing-edge flap and aileron (open access)

Effect on the low-speed aerodynamic characteristics of a 49 degree sweptback wing having an aspect ratio of 3.78 of blowing air over the trailing-edge flap and aileron

Report presenting an investigation in the full-scale tunnel to determine the effects on the aerodynamic characteristics of a 49.1 degree sweptback wing of blowing a high-energy stream of air over a trailing-edge flap and an aileron. The results indicated that significant increases in lift coefficient and an improvement in aileron effectiveness may be obtained by the blowing method of boundary-layer control.
Date: April 23, 1954
Creator: Whittle, Edward F., Jr. & Lipson, Stanley
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the aerodynamic and icing characteristics of a recessed fuel cell vent assembly 3: NACA flush-inlet-type vent (open access)

Investigation of the aerodynamic and icing characteristics of a recessed fuel cell vent assembly 3: NACA flush-inlet-type vent

An investigation conducted in the icing research tunnel to determine aerodynamic and icing characteristics of two flush-inlet-type fuel cell vent installations. The vent tubes were mounted in two different locations in the two installations. The vents were aerodynamically investigated to obtain vent-tube static-pressure differentials and pressure surveys as a function of tunnel-air velocity and angle of attack.
Date: April 23, 1948
Creator: Ruggeri, Robert S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-speed pressure distributions over the drooped-nose flap of a 42 degrees sweptback wing with circular-arc airfoil sections at a Reynolds number of 5.3 x 10(exp 6) (open access)

Low-speed pressure distributions over the drooped-nose flap of a 42 degrees sweptback wing with circular-arc airfoil sections at a Reynolds number of 5.3 x 10(exp 6)

Report presenting an investigation of the pressure distributions over the drooped-nose flap of a 42 degree sweptback wing with circular-arc airfoil sections and half-span trailing-edge split flaps in the 19-foot pressure tunnel. The effects of the deflection and span of the drooped-nose flap and effects of split trailing-edge flaps on the pressures over the drooped-nose flap were determined.
Date: September 23, 1948
Creator: Spooner, Stanley H. & Woods, Robert L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics of a Semispan Airplane Model With a Sweptback Wing and Tail From Tests at Transonic Speeds by the NACA Wing-Flow Method (open access)

Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics of a Semispan Airplane Model With a Sweptback Wing and Tail From Tests at Transonic Speeds by the NACA Wing-Flow Method

Report presenting an investigation using the NACA wing-flow method to determine the longitudinal stability and control characteristics at transonic speeds of a semispan airplane with a 45 degree sweptback wing and tail. Measurements of the lift and angle of attack for trim were made for several stabilizer and elevator settings. Testing was also performed to investigate the effects of transition wires mounted on the wing and tail, the effect of increasing the boundary-layer thickness on the test surface, and the effectiveness of a wing flap with a sweepback of 45 degrees.
Date: July 23, 1948
Creator: Sawyer, Richard H. & Lina, Lindsay J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Flight Measurements of Pressure-Distribution and Boundary-Layer Characteristics in the Presence of Shock (open access)

Some Flight Measurements of Pressure-Distribution and Boundary-Layer Characteristics in the Presence of Shock

Memorandum presenting some pressure-distribution and boundary-layer measurements made in flight in the presence of shock on two modifications of the local contour of the wings of a high-speed airplane. Results regarding the pressure distribution, boundary-layer surveys, and effects on test airplane are provided.
Date: July 23, 1948
Creator: Zalovcik, John A. & Luke, Ernest P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Empirical mode constants for calculating frequencies of axial-flow compressor blades (open access)

Empirical mode constants for calculating frequencies of axial-flow compressor blades

The vibration characteristics of a group of axial-flow compressor blades of similar geometry were investigated. Empirical-mode constants were determined for the first three bending and torsional modes. A comparison of experimentally determined frequencies of a second group of blades with frequencies computed using these mode constants showed that the computed values were correct within 10 percent. The approximate limiting ratios of depth to chord and length to chord below which these constants could not be used to compute the natural frequencies were also found experimentally.
Date: April 23, 1948
Creator: Millenson, M. B. & Wilterdink, P. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A limit pressure coefficient and an estimation of limit forces on airfoils at supersonic speeds (open access)

A limit pressure coefficient and an estimation of limit forces on airfoils at supersonic speeds

Report presenting the results of an estimation of the limit forces on airfoils at supersonic speeds. The limit pressure coefficient attainable on an airfoil is shown to be about 70 percent of the pressure coefficient for a vacuum over a wide range of Mach numbers.
Date: August 23, 1948
Creator: Mayer, John P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic-Flutter Investigation of Wings Attached to Two Low-Acceleration Rocket-Propelled Vehicles (open access)

Transonic-Flutter Investigation of Wings Attached to Two Low-Acceleration Rocket-Propelled Vehicles

Two low-acceleration transonic-flutter vehicles were launched and flown. The first carried two test wings, one of which fluttered at M = 0.92 at a frequency of 61.4 cycles per second. The reference flutter speed determined from two-dimensional theory for an unswept wing in incompressible flow is conservative when compared to the experimental flutter speed. The second vehicle carried two test wings, one of which failed at M = 0.71 because of low-frequency divergent oscillation. Since this failure was not caused by conventional flexure-torsion flutter, no comparison with a reference flutter speed can be made.
Date: November 23, 1948
Creator: Lundstrom, Reginald R.; Lauten, William T., Jr. & Angle, Ellwyn E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Operating Temperatures of I-40-5 Turbojet Engine Burner Liners and the Effect of Temperature Variation on Burner-Liner Service Life (open access)

Operating Temperatures of I-40-5 Turbojet Engine Burner Liners and the Effect of Temperature Variation on Burner-Liner Service Life

Report presenting an investigation of burner liners in a turbojet engine to determine the principal factors limiting the burner-liner service life. The investigation covered a range of engine speeds and testing was conducted to determine whether bare, ceramic-coated, or shielded thermocouples would give the most correct temperature readings.
Date: August 23, 1948
Creator: Wilsted, H. D.; Duffy, Robert T. & Grey, Ralph E.
System: The UNT Digital Library