Experimental investigation of thrust augmentation of a turbojet engine at zero ram by means of tail-pipe burning (open access)

Experimental investigation of thrust augmentation of a turbojet engine at zero ram by means of tail-pipe burning

Report presenting an investigation of the performance of a turbojet engine equipped with a tail-pipe burner at zero ram over a range of rotor speeds and tail-pipe-burner fuel flows. A thrust augmentation of 40 percent was obtained at zero ram for a tail-pipe-burner fuel-air ratio of 0.043 or a total fuel-air ratio of 0.056. Results with an engine with standard tail pipe, engine with tail pipe burner and no afterburning, and engine with tail pipe burner and afterburning are provided.
Date: January 6, 1947
Creator: Lundin, Bruce T.; Dowman, Harry W. & Gabriel, David S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial Experiments on Flutter of Unswept Cantilever Wings at Mach Number 1.3 (open access)

Initial Experiments on Flutter of Unswept Cantilever Wings at Mach Number 1.3

Report presenting the results of a preliminary experimental flutter investigation of widely different unswept cantilever wings at Mach number 1.3. Wings with a variety of mass-density parameters, center-of-gravity positions, and elastic-axis positions were tested.
Date: January 6, 1949
Creator: Tuovila, W. J.; Baker, John E. & Regier, Arthur A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of Aerodynamic Characteristics of a 35 Degree Sweptback NACA 65-009 Airfoil Model With 1/4-Chord Bevelled-Trailing-Edge Flap and Trim Tab by the NACA Wing-Flow Method (open access)

Measurements of Aerodynamic Characteristics of a 35 Degree Sweptback NACA 65-009 Airfoil Model With 1/4-Chord Bevelled-Trailing-Edge Flap and Trim Tab by the NACA Wing-Flow Method

The third investigation in a series to determine the fundamental characteristics of trailing-edge controls at transonic speeds. This particular report uses a 35 degree sweptback untapered airfoil model with an aspect ratio of 3 and a flap with a bevelled trailing edge with a trailing-edge angle of 23 degrees. Results regarding lift, pitching-moment, and hinge-moment characteristics are provided.
Date: January 6, 1950
Creator: Johnson, Harold I. & Brown, B. Porter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-speed wind-tunnel investigation of a thin 60 degree delta wing with double slotted, single slotted, plain, and split flaps (open access)

Low-speed wind-tunnel investigation of a thin 60 degree delta wing with double slotted, single slotted, plain, and split flaps

Report presenting a low-speed wind-tunnel investigation to determine the longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics of a thin delta wing equipped with various arrangements of double slotted, single slotted, plain, and split flaps. The wing was a flat plate with beveled leading and trailing edges and had a maximum thickness ratio of 0.045, and 60 degrees sweepback of the leading edge.
Date: January 6, 1953
Creator: Riebe, John M. & MacLeod, Richard G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the physical properties of petrolatum-stabilized magnesium-hydrocarbon slurry fuels (open access)

Study of the physical properties of petrolatum-stabilized magnesium-hydrocarbon slurry fuels

Magnesium-hydrocarbon slurries containing a moderate proportion of petrolatum have physical properties such that they offer promise as experimental aircraft fuels. The settling of the magnesium is greatly retarded by the petrolatum, and the slurries can easily be remixed to their original condition after storage. Successive batches which have closely similar properties can be prepared readily. The apparent viscosity of these slurries increased rapidly with increasing magnesium concentration, with increasing petrolatum concentration, and with decreasing temperature. As the apparent viscosity increased, the extent of settling and the ease of remixing both decreased. Although no quantitative correlation was found between the properties of the slurry and those of the petrolatum, and no one petrolatum gave slurries which were best in all respects, one of the five petrolatum used was judged to be superior to the others.
Date: January 6, 1954
Creator: Pinns, Murray L. & Goodman, Irving A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary investigation of performance and starting characteristics of liquid fluorine: Liquid oxygen mixtures with jet fuel (open access)

Preliminary investigation of performance and starting characteristics of liquid fluorine: Liquid oxygen mixtures with jet fuel

From Summary: "The performance of jet fuel with an oxidant mixture containing 70 percent liquid fluorine and 30 percent liquid oxygen by weight was investigated in a 500-pound-thrust engine operating at a chamber pressure of 300 pounds per square inch absolute. A one-oxidant-on-one-fuel skewed-hole impinging-jet injector was evaluated in a chamber of characteristic length equal to 50 inches. A maximum experimental specific impulse of 268 pound-seconds per pound was obtained at 25 percent fuel, which corresponds to 96 percent of the maximum theoretical specific impulse based on frozen composition expansion."
Date: January 6, 1954
Creator: Rothenberg, Edward A. & Ordin, Paul M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank tests of a 1/8-size powered dynamic model of the Martin PBM-5 seaplane equipped with a single Edo hydro-ski : TED No. NACA AD3110 (open access)

Tank tests of a 1/8-size powered dynamic model of the Martin PBM-5 seaplane equipped with a single Edo hydro-ski : TED No. NACA AD3110

Report presenting an investigation of the hydrodynamic characteristics of a powered dynamic model of the Martin PBM-5 seaplane equipped with a single Edo hydro-ski. Various hydro-ski positions were investigated. Results regarding aerodynamic and hydrodynamic characteristics, including excess thrust, smooth-water landings, smooth-water take-offs, rough-water take-offs, and spray are provided.
Date: January 6, 1956
Creator: Coffee, Claude W., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of aspect ratio on the air forces and moments of harmonically oscillating thin rectangular wings in supersonic potential flow (open access)

Effect of aspect ratio on the air forces and moments of harmonically oscillating thin rectangular wings in supersonic potential flow

This report treats the effect of aspect ratio on the air forces and moments of an oscillating flat rectangular wing in supersonic potential flow. The linearized velocity potential for the wing undergoing sinusoidal torsional oscillations simultaneously with sinusoidal vertical translations is derived in the form of a power series in terms of a frequency parameter. The series development is such that the differential equation for the velocity potential is satisfied to the required power of the frequency parameter considered and the linear boundary conditions are satisfied exactly. The method of solution can be utilized for other plan forms, that is, plan forms for which certain steady-state solutions are known.
Date: January 6, 1950
Creator: Watkins, Charles E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental determination of effects of frequency and amplitude on the lateral stability derivatives for a delta, a swept, and unswept wing oscillating in yaw (open access)

Experimental determination of effects of frequency and amplitude on the lateral stability derivatives for a delta, a swept, and unswept wing oscillating in yaw

"Three wing models were oscillated in yaw about their vertical axes to determine the effects of systematic variations of frequency and amplitude of oscillation on the in-phase and out-of-phase combination lateral stability derivatives resulting from this motion. The tests were made at low speeds for a 60 degree delta wing, a 45 degree swept wing, and an unswept wing; the swept and unswept wings had aspect ratios of 4. The results indicate that large changes in the magnitude of the stability derivatives due to the variation of frequency occur at high angles of attack, particularly for the delta wing" (p. 461).
Date: January 6, 1956
Creator: Fisher, Lewis R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of leading-edge chord extensions and an all-movable horizontal tail on the aerodynamic characteristics of a wing-body combination employing a triangular wing of aspect ratio 3 mounted in a high position at subsonic and supersonic speeds (open access)

Effects of leading-edge chord extensions and an all-movable horizontal tail on the aerodynamic characteristics of a wing-body combination employing a triangular wing of aspect ratio 3 mounted in a high position at subsonic and supersonic speeds

Report presenting the results of an experimental investigation of the effect of leading-edge chord extensions on the aerodynamic characteristics of a wing-body-tail combination employing a 3-percent-thick triangular wing of aspect ratio 3 in conjunction with an unswept, all-movable, horizontal tail located below the wing-chord plane. Lift, drag, pitching moment, and hinge moment were measured a range of Mach numbers and a constant Reynolds number.
Date: January 6, 1954
Creator: Wetzel, Benton E. & Pfyl, Frank A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of the Profile Drag of an Airplane Wing in Flight at High Reynolds Numbers (open access)

Determination of the Profile Drag of an Airplane Wing in Flight at High Reynolds Numbers

"Flight tests were made to determine the profile-drag coefficients of a portion of the original wing surface of an all-metal airplane and of a portion of the wing made aerodynamically smooth and more nearly fair than the original section. The wing section was approximately the NACA 2414.5. The tests were carried out over a range of airplane speeds giving a maximum Reynolds number of 15,000,000. Tests were also carried out to locate the point of transition from laminar to turbulent boundary layer and to determine the velocity distribution along the upper surface of the wing" (p. 483).
Date: January 6, 1939
Creator: Bicknell, Joseph
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Mechanism of Atomization Accompanying Solid Injection (open access)

The Mechanism of Atomization Accompanying Solid Injection

"A brief historical and descriptive account of solid injection is followed by a detailed review of the available theoretical and experimental data that seem to throw light on the mechanism of this form of atomization. It is concluded that this evidence indicates that (1) the atomization accompanying solid injection occurs at the surface of the liquid after it issues as a solid stream from the orifice; and (2) that such atomization has a mechanism physically identical with the atomization which takes place in an air stream, both being due merely to the formation, at the gas-liquid interface, of fine ligaments under the influence of the relative motion of gas and liquid, and to their collapse, under the influence of surface tension, to form the drops in the spray" (p. 735).
Date: January 6, 1932
Creator: Castleman, R. A., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library