Charts for Calculating the Performance of Airplanes Having Constant-Speed Propellers (open access)

Charts for Calculating the Performance of Airplanes Having Constant-Speed Propellers

"Charts are presented for determining the performance of airplanes having variable-pitch propellers, the pitch of which is assumed to be adjusted to maintain constant speed for all rates of flight. The charts are based on the general performance equations developed by Oswald in reference 1, and are used in a similar manner. Examples applying the charts to airplanes having both supercharged and unsupercharged engines are included" (p. 1).
Date: September 1936
Creator: White, Roland J. & Martin, Victor J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A general tank test of a model of the hull of the British Singapore IIC flying boat (open access)

A general tank test of a model of the hull of the British Singapore IIC flying boat

A general test was made in the N.A.C.A. tank of a 1/12-size model of the hull of the British Singapore IIC flying boat loaned by the Director of Research, British Air Ministry. The results are given in charts and are compared with the results of tests of a model of an American flying-boat hull, the Sikorsky S-40. The Singapore hull has a greater hump resistance but a much lower high-speed resistance than the S-40.
Date: September 1936
Creator: Dawson, John R. & Truscott, Starr
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of autogiro rotor-blade oscillations in the plane of the rotor disk (open access)

A study of autogiro rotor-blade oscillations in the plane of the rotor disk

An analysis of the factors governing the oscillation of an autogiro rotor blade in the plane of the rotor disk showed that the contribution of the air forces to the resultant motion was small and that the oscillation is essentially a direct effect of the rotor-blade flapping motion. A comparison of calculated oscillations with those measured in flight on three different rotors disclosed that the calculations gave satisfactory agreement with experiment. The calculated air forces on the rotor blade appear to be larger than the experimental ones, but this discrepancy can be attributed to the deficiencies in the strip analysis.
Date: September 1936
Creator: Wheatley, John B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Curvature on the Transition From Laminar to Turbulent Boundary Layer (open access)

The Effect of Curvature on the Transition From Laminar to Turbulent Boundary Layer

Note presenting a discrepancy between the predicted and actual point of transition from laminar to turbulent boundary layer that had been found. This effect may be due to the comparatively small radius of curvature of the upper surface of the wing.
Date: September 1937
Creator: Clauser, Milton & Clauser, Francis
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Curvature on the Transition From Laminar to Turbulent Boundary Layer (open access)

The Effect of Curvature on the Transition From Laminar to Turbulent Boundary Layer

"In the flow over the upper surface of a wing, a discrepancy between the predicted and actual point of transition from laminar to turbulent boundary layer was found. This effect may be due to the comparatively small radius of curvature of the upper surface of the wing. Tests were undertaken to investigate this effect. As far as the authors know, the present investigation is the first to show that curvature has a pronounced effect on the transition of the boundary layer from the laminar to the turbulent state" (p. 1).
Date: September 1937
Creator: Clauser, Milton & Clauser, Francis
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuselage-drag tests in the variable-density wind tunnel: streamline bodies of revolution, fineness ratio of 5 (open access)

Fuselage-drag tests in the variable-density wind tunnel: streamline bodies of revolution, fineness ratio of 5

From Summary: "Results are presented of the drag tests of six bodies of revolution with systematically varying shapes and with a fineness ratio of 5. The forms were derived from source-sink distributions, and formulas are presented for the calculation of the pressure distribution of the forms. The tests were made in the N.A.C.A. variable-density tunnel over a range of values of Reynolds number from about 1,500,000 to 25,000,000. The results show that the bodies with the sharper noses and tails have the lowest drag coefficients, even when the drag coefficients are based on the two-thirds power of the volume. The data shows the most important single characteristic of the body form to be the tail angle, which must be fine to obtain low drag."
Date: September 1937
Creator: Abbott, Ira H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Motion of the Two-Control Airplane in Rectilinear Flight After Initial Disturbances With Introduction of Controls Following an Exponential Law (open access)

Motion of the Two-Control Airplane in Rectilinear Flight After Initial Disturbances With Introduction of Controls Following an Exponential Law

"An airplane in steady rectilinear flight was assumed to experience an initial disturbance in rolling or yawing velocity. The equations of motion were solved to see if it was possible to hasten recovery of a stable airplane or to secure recovery of an unstable airplane by the application of a single lateral control following an exponential law. The sample computations indicate that, for initial disturbances complex in character, it would be difficult to secure correlation with any type of exponential control" (p. 1).
Date: September 1937
Creator: Klemin, Alexander
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spinning Characteristics of Wings 3: A Rectangular and Tapered Clark Y Monoplane Wing with Rounded Tips (open access)

Spinning Characteristics of Wings 3: A Rectangular and Tapered Clark Y Monoplane Wing with Rounded Tips

An investigation was made to determine the spinning characteristics of Clark Y monoplane wings with different plan forms. A rectangular wing and a wing tapered 5:2, both with rounded tips, were tested on the N.A.C.A. spinning balance in the 5-foot vertical wind tunnel. The aerodynamic characteristics of the models and a prediction of the angles of sideslip for steady spins are given. Also included is an estimate of the yawning moment that must be furnished by the parts of the airplane to balance the inertia couples and wing yawing moment for spinning equilibrium. The effects on the spin of changes in plan form and of variations of some of the important parameters are discussed and the results are compared with those for a rectangular wing with square tips. It is concluded that for a conventional monoplane using Clark Y wing the sideslip will be algebraically larger for the wing with the rounded tip than for the wing with the square tip and will be largest for the tapered wing. The effect of plan form on the spin will vary with the type of airplane; and the provision of a yawing-moment coefficient of -0.025 (i.e., opposing the spin) by the tail, …
Date: September 1937
Creator: Bamber, M. J. & House, R. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effects of partial-span plain flaps on the aerodynamic characteristics of a rectangular and a tapered Clark Y wing (open access)

The effects of partial-span plain flaps on the aerodynamic characteristics of a rectangular and a tapered Clark Y wing

An investigation was made to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of tapered and rectangular wings with partial-span plain flaps. Two Clark Y airfoils equipped with center section and with tip-section flaps were tested. The results showed that the aerodynamic characteristics of partial-span plain flaps were, in general, similar to those of split flaps of the same span, but that the lift and the drag were less for the wing with plain flaps than for the wing with split flaps of comparable size. For the rectangular wing with center-section plain flaps, the maximum lift and the lift-drag ratio at maximum lift were greater and the drag at maximum lift was less than for the wing with tip-section plain flaps of the same size. The maximum lift of the tapered wing varied in the same manner as that of the rectangular wing but the drag and the lift-drag-ratio relationship were opposite.
Date: September 1938
Creator: House, R. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-spinning wind-tunnel tests of a low-wing monoplane with systematic changes in wings and tails 3: mass distributed along the wings (open access)

Free-spinning wind-tunnel tests of a low-wing monoplane with systematic changes in wings and tails 3: mass distributed along the wings

Report presenting an investigation of 24 wing-tail combinations with the weight moved from the center of gravity toward the wing tips so that the distribution of mass along the wings was increased. Results regarding the effects of wings, effects of tail arrangement, effects of control setting, relationships between spin characteristics, and comparison with results for basic loading are provided.
Date: September 1938
Creator: Seidman, Oscar & Neihouse, A. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gyroscopic Instruments for Instrument Flying (open access)

Gyroscopic Instruments for Instrument Flying

The gyroscopic instruments commonly used in instrument flying in the United States are the turn indicator, the directional gyro, the gyromagnetic compass, the gyroscopic horizon, and the automatic pilot. These instruments are described. Performance data and the method of testing in the laboratory are given for the turn indicator, the directional gyro, and the gyroscopic horizon. Apparatus for driving the instruments is discussed.
Date: September 1938
Creator: Brombacher, W. G. & Trent, W. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Stability in Relation to the Use of an Automatic Pilot (open access)

Longitudinal Stability in Relation to the Use of an Automatic Pilot

"The effect of restraint in pitching introduced by an automatic pilot upon the longitudinal stability of an airplane has been studied. Customary simplifying assumptions have been made in setting down the equations of motion, and the results of computations based on the simplified equations are presented to show the effect of an automatic pilot installed in an airplane of known dimensions and characteristics. The equations developed have been applied by making calculations for a Clark biplane and a Fairchild 22 monoplane" (p. 1).
Date: September 1938
Creator: Klemin, Alexander; Pepper, Perry A. & Wittner, Howard A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests of N-85, N-86 and N-87 Airfoil Sections in the 11-Inch High Speed Wind Tunnel (open access)

Tests of N-85, N-86 and N-87 Airfoil Sections in the 11-Inch High Speed Wind Tunnel

"Three airfoils, the N-85, the N-86, and the N-87, were tested at the request of the Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy Department, to determine the suitability of these sections for use as propeller-blade sections. Further tests of the NACA 0009-64 airfoil were also made to measure the aerodynamic effect of thickening the trailing edge in accordance with current propeller practice. The N-86 and the N-87 airfoils appear to be nearly equivalent aerodynamically and both are superior to the N-85 airfoil" (p. 1).
Date: September 1938
Creator: Stack, John & Lindsey, W. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Combined Beam-Column Stresses of Aluminum-Alloy Channel Sections (open access)

Combined Beam-Column Stresses of Aluminum-Alloy Channel Sections

The results of a research program to obtain design data on the strength of open-channel aluminum-alloy sections subjected to combined column and beam action. The results of the tests of about 70 specimens were graphed for stresses due to axial load and stresses due to bending loading as functions of length to radius of gyration of the specimens. From these graphs a design chart was derived that is suitable for ready use.
Date: September 1939
Creator: Gottlieb, R.; Thompson, T. M. & Witt, E. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A flight investigation of the distribution of ice-inhibiting fluids on a propeller blade (open access)

A flight investigation of the distribution of ice-inhibiting fluids on a propeller blade

Report presenting an investigation of the flow of ice-inhibiting fluids over the blade surfaces of a 12.5-foot-daimeter propeller in flight by discharging dyed fluids at various stations along the leading edges of the blades. The effects on the distribution of varying the fluid composition, the blade-surface roughness, and the orifice design were also observed.
Date: September 1939
Creator: Rodert, Lewis A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An instrument for estimating tautness of doped fabrics on aircraft (open access)

An instrument for estimating tautness of doped fabrics on aircraft

Technical note presenting the design and use of a spring-loaded tautness meter that can be used in both horizontal and vertical positions to compare the tautness of various panels. Results of tests made on the fabric coverings of various airplanes are reported and discussed.
Date: September 1939
Creator: Kline, Gordon M. & Schiefer, Herbert F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of an N.A.C.A. 23021 Airfoil With Two Arrangements of a 40-Percent-Chord Slotted Flap (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of an N.A.C.A. 23021 Airfoil With Two Arrangements of a 40-Percent-Chord Slotted Flap

Note presenting an investigation in the 7- by 10-foot wind tunnel of an NACA 23021 airfoil with two arrangements of a 40-percent-chord slotted flap. The effect of slot shape, flap position, and flap deflection on the section aerodynamic characteristics was determined. Results regarding coefficients, precision, plain airfoils, and slotted-flap arrangements are provided.
Date: September 1939
Creator: Duschik, Frank
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Effect of Yawing on Lateral-Stability Characteristics 2: Rectangular N.A.C.A. 23012 Wing with a Circular Fuselage and a Fin (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Effect of Yawing on Lateral-Stability Characteristics 2: Rectangular N.A.C.A. 23012 Wing with a Circular Fuselage and a Fin

Note presenting testing of an N.A.C.A. 23012 rectangular wing with rounded tips in combination with a fuselage of circular cross section at several angles of yaw in the NACA 7- by 10-foot wind tunnel. The model was tested as a high-wing, a midwing, and a low-wing monoplane; for each wing location, tests were made with two amounts of dihedral and with partial-span split flaps. Results regarding the wing and fuselage, fin and fuselage, and wing, fuselage, and fin are provided.
Date: September 1939
Creator: Bamber, M. J. & House, R. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Aileron as an Aid to Recovery From the Spin (open access)

The Aileron as an Aid to Recovery From the Spin

From Introduction: "In order to afford a means of comparison and to obtain a clear understanding of the results, a study of the effects of normal angular deflections of the ailerons, with and against the spin, was included in the investigation. Ailerons deflected with the spin means that the ailerons are deflected with right aileron up and left aileron down in a right spin. The results of the investigation are discussed in this paper."
Date: September 1940
Creator: Neihouse, A. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Wind-Tunnel Data on Directional Stability and Control (open access)

Analysis of Wind-Tunnel Data on Directional Stability and Control

From Summary: "This paper does not attempt to establish criterions for directional stability and control; rather, the emphasis is placed on providing some basis for design to specified criterions. An example applying the design methods has been included."
Date: September 1940
Creator: Pass, H. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ionization in the Knock Zone of an Internal-Combustion Engine (open access)

Ionization in the Knock Zone of an Internal-Combustion Engine

"The ionization in the knock zone of an internal-combustion engine was investigated. A suspected correlation between the intensity of knock and the degree of ionization was verified and an oscillation in the degree of ionization corresponding in frequency to the knock vibrations in the cylinder pressure was observed" (p. 1).
Date: September 1940
Creator: Hastings, Charles E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Determination of Control System Pulley-Axis Angles (open access)

Analytical Determination of Control System Pulley-Axis Angles

From Introduction: "The ideas developed in this paper are presented as a means of saving the designer's time and as a method of reduction of control-system friction by an accurate calculation of pulley-axis angles without the errors and difficult checking incident to any graphical method."
Date: September 1941
Creator: Driggs, I. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Combined Beam-Column Stresses of Aluminum-Alloy Channel Sections (open access)

Combined Beam-Column Stresses of Aluminum-Alloy Channel Sections

"The results of tests of 65 specimens of aluminum-alloy channel sections are graphed for stresses due to axial and bending loads as functions of the ratio of length of specimen to its radius of gyration, and from these data a suggested design chart is derived that is suitable for ready use" (p. 1).
Date: September 1941
Creator: Hutton, J. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Minimum Induced Drag in Wing-Fuselage Interference (open access)

Minimum Induced Drag in Wing-Fuselage Interference

Note presenting a method for obtaining the minimum induced drag of airfoils in the proximity of ideal internal boundaries. The theorem is applied to the case of an ideal wing-fuselage combination consisting of a lifting line intersecting an infinitely long circular cylindrical fuselage to determine the effect of wing height on the minimum induced drag. The analysis used can be modified for combinations with different fuselage cross sections.
Date: September 1941
Creator: Pepper, Perry A.
System: The UNT Digital Library