Wind-Tunnel Tests of Wing Flaps Suitable for Direct Control of Glide-Path Angle (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests of Wing Flaps Suitable for Direct Control of Glide-Path Angle

"Preliminary tests have been made for the purpose of obtaining a flap arrangement suitable for direct and immediate control of the steepness of the glide path of an airplane, a use for which present flaps are not satisfactory. An attempt has been made to develop a flap giving a reasonably high maximum lift coefficient with relatively low deflection and maintaining this value of the maximum lift coefficient with a large increase of deflection, the increase in deflection being accompanied by a large increase in drag. An arrangement was found that gave a maximum lift coefficient of approximately 1.90 for all flap deflections between 25 and 80 degrees, within which range the drag of the wing increased regularly to a large value" (p. 1).
Date: January 1936
Creator: Weick, Fred E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Notes on the technique of landing airplanes equipped with wing flaps (open access)

Notes on the technique of landing airplanes equipped with wing flaps

"The proper landing of airplanes equipped with flaps, although probably no more difficult than landing without them, requires a different technique. The effects of flaps on the aerodynamics characteristics of a wing are given and, with the aid of figures and diagrams, a detailed comparison of the glide and landing of an airplane with and without flaps is made. The dangers attending improper execution and the importance of such factors as air speed fuselage attitude, glide-path angle, and control manipulation, upon all of which a pilot bases his judgement, are emphasized" (p. 1).
Date: January 1936
Creator: Gough, Melvin N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Limitations of the Pilot in Applying Forces to Airplane Controls (open access)

Limitations of the Pilot in Applying Forces to Airplane Controls

Measurements were made to determine the relative maximum forces a pilot can exert on the controls of an airplane with the view of obtaining systematic data upon which to base the location of controls within the cockpit and the design of the control surfaces. A cockpit model of generous proportions, capable of being rotated to any attitude, was built with the location of the control stick and rudder pedals adjustable over a wide range of positions with respect to the seat. Besides measurements of maximum forces obtainable with various control locations and with the pilot in several attitudes, estimates of forces within the range normally encountered in flight were made to gain an indication of the accuracy of estimating control forces.
Date: January 1936
Creator: Gough, M. N. & Beard, A. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank tests of three models of flying-boat hulls of the pointed-step type with different angles of dead rise - NACA model 35 series (open access)

Tank tests of three models of flying-boat hulls of the pointed-step type with different angles of dead rise - NACA model 35 series

From Summary: "The results of tank tests of three models of flying-boat hulls of the pointed-step type with different angles of dead rise are given in charts and are compared with results from tests of more conventional hulls. Increasing the angle of dead rise from 15 to 25 degrees: had little effect on the hump resistance; increased the resistance throughout the planning range; increased the best trim angle; reduced the maximum positive trimming moment required to obtain best trim angle; and had but a slight effect on the spray characteristics. For approximately the same angles of dead rise the resistance of the pointed-step hulls were considerably lower at high speeds than those of the more conventional hulls."
Date: January 1936
Creator: Dawson, John R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of Wing Flutter (open access)

Status of Wing Flutter

"This report presents a survey of previous theoretical and experimental investigations on wing flutter covering thirteen cases of flutter observed on airplanes. The direct cause of flutter is, in the majority of cases, attributable to (mass-) unbalanced ailerons. Under the conservative assumption that the flutter with the phase angle most favorable for excitation occurs only in two degrees of freedom, the lowest critical speed can be estimated from the data obtained on the oscillation bench" (p. 1).
Date: January 1936
Creator: Küssner, H. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Torsion and buckling of open sections (open access)

Torsion and buckling of open sections

Following an abstract of the well-known theory of torsion in compression, the writers give directions for the practical calculation of the values of C(sub BT) (resistance to flexure and torsion) and i(sub SP(exp 2)), which determine the torsion. The second part treats the experiments in support of the theory of torsion of plain and flanged angle sections.
Date: January 1936
Creator: Wagner, H. & Pretschner, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Three Lowest Bending Frequencies of a Rotating Propeller (open access)

Analysis of the Three Lowest Bending Frequencies of a Rotating Propeller

From Summary: "The present report is a survey of the existing data for computing the bending frequency and a check on the dependability of the calculating methods."
Date: January 1936
Creator: Liebers, F.
System: The UNT Digital Library