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Preliminary Results of Natural Icing of an Axial-Flow Turbojet Engine (open access)

Preliminary Results of Natural Icing of an Axial-Flow Turbojet Engine

Memorandum presenting a flight investigation in natural icing conditions to determine the effect of ice formations on the performance of an axial-flow turbojet engine. Tail-pipe temperature increased from 761 to 1065 degrees Fahrenheit and the jet thrust decreased from 1234 to 910 pounds during a period of 45 minutes in icing. No general conclusions can be reached from the data because the icing condition was relatively light.
Date: August 6, 1948
Creator: Acker, Loren W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary results of natural icing of an axial-flow turbojet engine (open access)

Preliminary results of natural icing of an axial-flow turbojet engine

Report presenting a flight investigation in natural icing conditions to determine the effect of ice formations on the performance of an axial-flow turbojet engine. Results regarding the tail-pipe temperature, engine jet thrust, and characteristics of ice formation are provided. No general conclusions can be reached from the data because the icing condition was relatively light.
Date: August 6, 1948
Creator: Acker, Loren W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Static Aerodynamic Forces and Moments at Low Speed on a Canard Missle During Simulated Launching From the Midsemispan and Wing-Tip Locations of a 45 Degree Sweptback Wing-Fuselage Combination (open access)

Experimental Static Aerodynamic Forces and Moments at Low Speed on a Canard Missle During Simulated Launching From the Midsemispan and Wing-Tip Locations of a 45 Degree Sweptback Wing-Fuselage Combination

Report presenting an investigation at low speed to determine the static aerodynamic forces and moments on a canard missile model during launching from the midsemispan and wing-tip locations of a wing-fuselage combination with a 45 degree sweptback wing. When the missile was mounted under the wing at the midsemispan location, changes in chordwise position produced large changes in missile forces and moments.
Date: April 6, 1955
Creator: Alford, William J., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Blade-Section Camber on the Stall-Flutter Characteristics of Three NACA Propellers at Zero Advance (open access)

The Effect of Blade-Section Camber on the Stall-Flutter Characteristics of Three NACA Propellers at Zero Advance

Report presenting an investigation to determine the effect of blade-section camber on the stall-flutter characteristics of three propellers using a 6000-horsepower propeller dynamometer. Up to a certain blade angle, there was an increase in flutter-speed coefficient with an increase in blade-section design lift coefficient. An increase in thrust was found to lead to an increase in tip Mach number in the flutter region of the propeller blades.
Date: April 6, 1953
Creator: Allis, Arthur E. & Swihart, John M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Knock-Limited Performance of Blends of AN-F-28 Fuel Containing 2 Percent Aromatic Amines 5 (open access)

Knock-Limited Performance of Blends of AN-F-28 Fuel Containing 2 Percent Aromatic Amines 5

Report discussing testing of 2-percent additions of seven aromatic amines on the knock-limited performance of 28-R fuel in a CFR engine. The most effective antiknock additives are described.
Date: August 6, 1945
Creator: Alquist, Henry & Tower, Leonard K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight and Preflight Tests of a Ram Jet Burning Magnesium Slurry Fuel and Utilizing a Solid-Propellant Gas Generator for Fuel Expulsion (open access)

Flight and Preflight Tests of a Ram Jet Burning Magnesium Slurry Fuel and Utilizing a Solid-Propellant Gas Generator for Fuel Expulsion

Data obtained from the first flight test of a ram jet utilizing a magnesium slurry fuel are presented. The ram jet accelerated from a Mach number of 1.75 to a Mach number of 3.48 in 15.5 seconds. During this period a maximum values of air specific impulse and gross thrust coefficient were calculated to be 151 seconds and 0.658, respectively. The rocket gas generator used as a fuel-pumping system operated successfully.
Date: April 6, 1955
Creator: Bartlett, Walter A., Jr. & Hagginbothom, William K., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Additional Studies of the Stability and Controllability of an Unswept-Wing Vertically Rising Airplane Model in Hovering Flight Including Studies of Various Tethered Landing Techniques (open access)

Additional Studies of the Stability and Controllability of an Unswept-Wing Vertically Rising Airplane Model in Hovering Flight Including Studies of Various Tethered Landing Techniques

Report discussing the results of an investigation to determine the stability and control characteristics of a flying model of an unswept-wing vertically rising airplane. Information about stabilization, maneuverability, rolling motions, and landings is provided.
Date: November 6, 1951
Creator: Bates, William R.; Lovell, Powell M., Jr. & Smith, Charles C., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lift and drag characteristics of the Douglas X-3 research airplane obtained during demonstration flights to a Mach number of 1.20 (open access)

Lift and drag characteristics of the Douglas X-3 research airplane obtained during demonstration flights to a Mach number of 1.20

Report presenting lift and drag data obtained during the Douglas X-3 airplane. The data covered the Mach number range from 0.82 to 1.20 with considerable variation in lift. A comparison of the flight data with data from wind-tunnel and rocket-model tests shows that the model tests adequately predict the performance of the airplane.
Date: December 6, 1954
Creator: Bellman, Donald R. & Murphy, Edward D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of channel geometry on the quenching of laminar flames (open access)

Effect of channel geometry on the quenching of laminar flames

Report presenting the effect of channel geometry on flame quenching, as calculated on the basis of average active particle chain lengths, is related among six different geometries: plane parallel plates of infinite extent, cylindrical tubes, rectangular slots, cylindrical annuli, and tubes of elliptical and equilaterally triangular shape. The results indicated that the observed variation of flame quenching as a function of quenching geometry may be successfully predicted for a range of pressures and for rich as well as lean propane-air flames.
Date: May 6, 1954
Creator: Berlad, A. L. & Potter, A. E., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of Pressure Recovery of a Single-Conical-Shock Nose Inlet at Mach Number 5.4 (open access)

Investigation of Pressure Recovery of a Single-Conical-Shock Nose Inlet at Mach Number 5.4

An experimental investigation of the performance of a single-conical-shock diffuser was conducted at a Mach number of 5.4 and a Reynolds number based on model diameter of 375,000. Total-pressure recoveries of 13.7 and 13.1 percent were obtained at angles of attack of 0 degrees and 3 degrees, respectively. The corresponding kinetic energy efficiencies were 86.4 percent at an angle of attack of 0 degrees and 86.0 percent at an angle of attack of 3 degrees.
Date: April 6, 1953
Creator: Bernstein, Harry & Haefeli, Rudolph C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of Isentropic Nose Inlets at Mach Number of 5.6 (open access)

Performance of Isentropic Nose Inlets at Mach Number of 5.6

Memorandum presenting an investigation of the performance of inlet configurations with a forebody designed for isentropic external compression at a nominal Mach number of 5.6. At zero angle of attack, all the configurations yielded larger total-pressure recoveries than had previously been obtained with a single-conical-shock inlet. Results regarding the flow about the forebody, inlet performance, and performance comparisons are provided.
Date: May 6, 1954
Creator: Bernstein, Harry & Haefeli, Rudolph C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of Isentropic Nose Inlets at Mach Number of 5.6 (open access)

Performance of Isentropic Nose Inlets at Mach Number of 5.6

Memorandum presenting an investigation of the performance of inlet configurations with a forebody designed for isentropic external compression at a nominal Mach number of 5.6. At zero angle of attack, all of the configurations yielded larger total-pressure recoveries than had previously been obtianed with a single-conical-shock inlet. Results regarding the flow about the forebody and performance comparisons are provided.
Date: May 6, 1954
Creator: Bernstein, Harry & Haefeli, Rudolph C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the pressure-ratio requirements of the Langley 11-inch hypersonic tunnel with a variable-geometry diffuser (open access)

Investigation of the pressure-ratio requirements of the Langley 11-inch hypersonic tunnel with a variable-geometry diffuser

Report presenting tests in the 11-inch hypersonic tunnel at Mach number 6.86 to determine the effectiveness of an adjustable supersonic diffuser without boundary-layer control in reducing the pressure ratios across the system required to maintain supersonic flow. Testing indicated that the pressure ratio could be reduced to about one-third the pressure ratio required for starting.
Date: October 6, 1950
Creator: Bertram, Mitchel H.
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
Wind-Tunnel Experiments Concerning the Dynamic Behavior of a Low-Speed Slowly Spinning Fin-Stabilized Rocket (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Experiments Concerning the Dynamic Behavior of a Low-Speed Slowly Spinning Fin-Stabilized Rocket

Report presenting an investigation to determine the effectiveness of studying the dynamic characteristics of a low-speed slowly spinning fin-stabilized rocket with a free-oscillation technique and to study certain types of behavior that have been observed in this type of missile. Results regarding the stability of the original model, the effect of reversing direction of arming propeller, the effect of increasing the size of the reversed-rotation arming propeller, the effect of removing the arming propeller, the effect of adding a spoiler nose ring to a basic model, and the effect of changes in the spin rate are provided.
Date: July 6, 1954
Creator: Bird, John D. & Lichtenstein, Jacob H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Experiments Concerning the Dynamic Behavior of a Low-Speed Slowly Spinning Fin-Stabilized Rocket (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Experiments Concerning the Dynamic Behavior of a Low-Speed Slowly Spinning Fin-Stabilized Rocket

Report presenting an investigation made in the stability tunnel to determine the effectiveness with which the dynamic characteristics of a low-speed slowly spinning fin-stabilized rocket could be studied by a free-oscillation technique and to study certain peculiarities of behavior. Results regarding the stability of the original model, effect of reversing direction of the arming propeller, effect of increasing size of reversed-rotation of the arming propeller, effect of removing the arming propeller, effect of adding a spoiler nose ring to the basic model, and the effect of changes in spin rate are provided.
Date: July 6, 1954
Creator: Bird, John D. & Lichtenstein, Jacob H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability and drag characteristics of 1/10-scale model of the Convair XF2Y-1 airplane with open inlets containing boundary layer splitter plates as obtained in free flight at Mach numbers between 0.7 and 1.5: TED No. NACA DE 365 (open access)

Stability and drag characteristics of 1/10-scale model of the Convair XF2Y-1 airplane with open inlets containing boundary layer splitter plates as obtained in free flight at Mach numbers between 0.7 and 1.5: TED No. NACA DE 365

Report presenting a scale rocket-propelled model of the Convair XF2Y-1 water-based fighter airplane in free flight in a range of Mach numbers. Results regarding stability characteristics, trim characteristics, drag characteristics, and inlet and duct characteristics are provided.
Date: April 6, 1955
Creator: Bland, William M., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Static Longitudinal and Lateral Stability Characteristics Including Effects of Transonic Area Rule and Wing Modification of a 0.10- Scale Model of the Douglas A4D-1 Airplane at Transonic Speeds (open access)

Static Longitudinal and Lateral Stability Characteristics Including Effects of Transonic Area Rule and Wing Modification of a 0.10- Scale Model of the Douglas A4D-1 Airplane at Transonic Speeds

Report discussing testing of a model of the Douglas A4D-1 to investigate the static longitudinal characteristics of wing and fuselage modifications and the static lateral characteristics of the basic model.
Date: July 6, 1956
Creator: Bollech, Thomas V. & Wornom, Dewey E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Investigation of Internal Flow Characteristics of Forward Underslung Fuselage Scoops With Unswept Entrances at Mach Numbers of 1.41 to 1.96 (open access)

Experimental Investigation of Internal Flow Characteristics of Forward Underslung Fuselage Scoops With Unswept Entrances at Mach Numbers of 1.41 to 1.96

Report presenting an investigation of two versions of a type of forward underslung scoop mounted on a pointed fuselage in the supersonic blowdown tunnel. The scoop entrances were in the shape of a 60 degree sector of an annulus, but the sides of one scoop were sweptback, while the others were unswept. Results regarding the shadowgraphs and surface-pressure distributions and total-pressure recovery are provided.
Date: March 6, 1952
Creator: Boswinkle, Robert W., Jr. & Mitchell, Meade H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure and Force Characteristics at Transonic Speeds of a Submerged Divergent-Walled Air Inlet on a Body of Revolution (open access)

Pressure and Force Characteristics at Transonic Speeds of a Submerged Divergent-Walled Air Inlet on a Body of Revolution

Report presenting an investigation in the transonic tunnel on a submerged inlet with a divergent-walled approach ramp to determine flow phenomena, pressure recovery, and external forces to provide correlation with available data obtained on similar inlets. Results regarding the pressure characteristics, aerodynamic forces, and performance comparisons are provided.
Date: May 6, 1953
Creator: Braden, John A. & Pierpont, P. Kenneth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Static-Pressure Fluctuations in Duct of a Scale Inlet Model of a Supersonic Fighter-Bomber Airplane (open access)

Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Static-Pressure Fluctuations in Duct of a Scale Inlet Model of a Supersonic Fighter-Bomber Airplane

Report presenting a transonic investigation of the static-pressure fluctuations in the left duct of a scale inlet model of a supersonic fighter-bomber airplane in the transonic tunnel. Results regarding amplitude characteristics of pressure fluctuations, power-spectral analyses, and flow distortions at compressor face are provided.
Date: August 6, 1957
Creator: Brooks, Joseph D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Static-Pressure Fluctuations in Duct of a Scale Inlet Model of a Supersonic Fighter-Bomber Airplane (open access)

Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Static-Pressure Fluctuations in Duct of a Scale Inlet Model of a Supersonic Fighter-Bomber Airplane

Report presenting a transonic investigation of the static-pressure fluctuations in the left duct of a scale inlet model of a supersonic fighter-bomber airplane. The amplitude and frequency of pressure fluctuations were measured using an electrical pressure gage mounted on the diffuser wall at several Mach numbers and mass-flow ratios. Results regarding amplitude characteristics of pressure fluctuations, power-spectral analyses, and flow distortions at compressor face are provided.
Date: August 6, 1957
Creator: Brooks, Joseph D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of Minimum Drag and Maximum Lift-Drag Ratios of Several Wing-Body Combinations Including a Cambered Triangular Wing at Low Reynolds Numbers and at Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Investigation of Minimum Drag and Maximum Lift-Drag Ratios of Several Wing-Body Combinations Including a Cambered Triangular Wing at Low Reynolds Numbers and at Supersonic Speeds

Report presenting testing of wing-body combinations incorporating several wing plan forms of theoretical interest at Mach numbers of 1.62, 1.93, and 2.41 in the supersonic tunnel. One triangular, one arrow, and tow diamond plan forms were tested. Results regarding minimum drag, lift-curve slope, center-of-pressure positions, drag due to lift, and lift-drag ratios are provided.
Date: August 6, 1951
Creator: Brown, Clinton E. & Hargrave, L. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of X24C-2 10-Stage Axial-Flow Compressor 3 - Surge Characteristics (open access)

Investigation of X24C-2 10-Stage Axial-Flow Compressor 3 - Surge Characteristics

Compressor operation at low air flows for a given speed is limited by unstable flow conditions, commonly called surge. An investigation of surge in centrifugal compressors (reference 1) showed that the pulsation of pressures and velocities occurred when the slope of the compressor characteristic curve was positive and that the magnitude and frequency, as well as the incidence of surge, depended on the capacity and resistance of the total system. Although the theory presented in reference 1 is applicable to axial-floe compressors, little experimental information is available on the surge characteristics of the individual stages of axial-flow compressors, or on the variation of the surge characteristics with operating conditions.
Date: August 6, 1948
Creator: Buckner, Howard A., Jr. & Downing, Richard M.
System: The UNT Digital Library