Aerodynamic Characteristics of a 0.04956-Scale Model of the Convair F-102A Airplane at Mach Numbers of 1.41, 1.61, and 2.01 (open access)

Aerodynamic Characteristics of a 0.04956-Scale Model of the Convair F-102A Airplane at Mach Numbers of 1.41, 1.61, and 2.01

"Tests have been made in the Langley 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel at Mach numbers of 1.41, 1.61, and 2.01 of various arrangements of a 0.04956-scale model of the Convair F-102A airplane with faired inlets. Tests made of the model equipped with a plain wing, a wing with 6.4 percent conical camber, and a wing with 15 percent conical camber. Body modifications including an extended nose, a modified canopy, and extended afterbody fillets were evaluated" (p. 1).
Date: September 30, 1955
Creator: Spearman, M. Leroy & Driver, Cornelius
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Speed Cascade Tests of a Blade Section Designed for Typical Hub Conditions of High-Flow Transonic Rotors (open access)

High-Speed Cascade Tests of a Blade Section Designed for Typical Hub Conditions of High-Flow Transonic Rotors

Report discussing high-speed cascade tests made of a blade section designed for conditions typical of the hub section of high-flow transonic rotors. The intent of the testing is to provide information on the effects of local surface Mach numbers on blade performance. The test results, effect of more forward location on peak surface velocities, effect of increase in pressure-rise coefficient, effect of Mach number and pressure rise on turning angle, and a comparison of variation in momentum-loss coefficient with surface pressure-rise coefficient are provided.
Date: September 28, 1955
Creator: Savage, Melvyn; Felix, A. Richard & Emery, James C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics as Determined by the Rocket-Model Technique for an Inline, Cruciform, Canard Missile Configuration With a Low-Aspect-Ratio Wing Having Trailing-Edge Flap Controls for a Mach Number Range of 0.7 to 1. (open access)

Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics as Determined by the Rocket-Model Technique for an Inline, Cruciform, Canard Missile Configuration With a Low-Aspect-Ratio Wing Having Trailing-Edge Flap Controls for a Mach Number Range of 0.7 to 1.

Report presenting tests of two models of an inline, cruciform, canard missile configuration with a low-aspect-ratio wing equipped with flap-type controls to determine the missile's longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics. Stability derivatives and control and drag characteristics are presented for a range of Mach numbers.
Date: September 28, 1955
Creator: Baber, Hal T., Jr. & Moul, Martin T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics as Determined by the Rocket-Model Technique for an Inline, Cruciform, Canard Missile Configuration With a Low-Aspect-Ratio Wing Having Trailing-Edge Flap Controls for a Mach Number Range of 0.7 to 1.8 (open access)

Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics as Determined by the Rocket-Model Technique for an Inline, Cruciform, Canard Missile Configuration With a Low-Aspect-Ratio Wing Having Trailing-Edge Flap Controls for a Mach Number Range of 0.7 to 1.8

Report presenting testing of two full-scale models of an inline, cruciform, canard missile configuration with a low-aspect-ratio wing equipped with flap-type controls to determine the missile's longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics. Stability derivatives and control and drag characteristics are provided.
Date: September 28, 1955
Creator: Baber, Hal T., Jr. & Moul, Martin T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Inlet-Flow-Air Distortion on Steady-State Altitude Performance of an Axial-Flow Turbojet Engine (open access)

Effects of Inlet-Flow-Air Distortion on Steady-State Altitude Performance of an Axial-Flow Turbojet Engine

Report presenting the effects of inlet-air-flow distortion on the steady-state performance of a current axial-flow turbojet engine studied in an NACA altitude test chamber at a range of altitudes and simulated Mach number of 0.8. Radial distortions of various shapes up to 22 percent of the average engine-inlet total pressure and circumferential distortions up to 26 percent were imposed. Results regarding propagation through the engine, compressor-interstage performance and stall, effects on component performance, effects on overall engine performance, and effect on compressor blade vibration are provided.
Date: September 27, 1955
Creator: Conrad, E. William; Hanson, Morgan P. & McAulay, John E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ideal temperature rise due to constant-pressure combustion of a JP-4 fuel (open access)

Ideal temperature rise due to constant-pressure combustion of a JP-4 fuel

The ideal temperature rise due to the constant-pressure combustion of a methylene (CH sub 2) fuel was calculated. CH sub 2 fuel closely approximates MIL-F-5624 grade JP-4 fuel presently used in most turbojet and ram-jet engines. Charts are presented from which the ideal temperature rise or the ideal quantity of fuel required to obtain a specified combustion temperature may be obtained for any flight condition likely to be encountered with turbojet or ram-jet engines using this fuel. The charts are applicable only to a fuel having a hydrogen-carbon mass ratio of 0.168.
Date: September 27, 1955
Creator: Huntley, S. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance characteristics of hemispherical target-type thrust reversers (open access)

Performance characteristics of hemispherical target-type thrust reversers

Report presenting an investigation to determine the reverse-thrust performance of hemispherical target-type thrust reversers over a wide range of geometric variables. Several factors were found that increased the flow turn angle and reverse-thrust ratio, primarily the hemisphere diameter. Results regarding operating characteristics, relation of flow turn angle and reverse-thrust ratio, reverse-flow velocities and pressures along boattail, effect of boattail shape on reverse-thrust ratio, and modifications to hemispherical thrust reverser are provided.
Date: September 27, 1955
Creator: Steffen, Fred W.; McArdle, Jack G. & Coats, James W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary investigation of a conical spike inlet in combination with a vertical-wedge auxiliary inlet at Mach number 1.9 (open access)

Preliminary investigation of a conical spike inlet in combination with a vertical-wedge auxiliary inlet at Mach number 1.9

Pressure-recovery characteristics of a nacelle-type-spike inlet in combination with a vertical-wedge auxiliary scoop are presented for a free-stream Mach number of 1.9 at zero angle of attack. The auxiliary scoop provided 17 percent additional air flow with a drop in critical pressure recovery from 0.86 to 0.81. However, in terms of inlet-engine matching, the pressure recovery of the undersized spike inlet operating at a specified corrected air flow increased with the scoop open, for example, from 0.69 to 0.81.
Date: September 27, 1955
Creator: Beke, Andrew; Allen, John L. & Williams, Thomas
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Various Modifications on the Static Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics of a 0.065-Scale Model of the Chance Vought Regulus II Missile at a Mach Number of 2.01 (open access)

Effects of Various Modifications on the Static Longitudinal Stability and Control Characteristics of a 0.065-Scale Model of the Chance Vought Regulus II Missile at a Mach Number of 2.01

"An investigation has been conducted in the Langley 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel to determine the effects on the static longitudinal stability and control characteristics of various modifications to a 0.065-scale model of the Chance Vought Regulus II missile. The modifications consisted of a control housing on top of the fuselage, two sizes of canard surfaces with fixed incidence angles, various angles of nose droop, and two types of inlet boundary-layer bleed diverters. The tests were made at a Mach number of 2.01 and a Reynolds number, based on the mean aerodynamic chord of 1.54 x 10(exp 6)" (p. 1).
Date: September 26, 1955
Creator: Robinson, Ross B. & Driver, Cornelius
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of various modifications on the static longitudinal stability and control characteristics of a 0.065-scale model of the Chance Vought Regulus II missile at a Mach number of 2.01: TED No. NACA AD 398 (open access)

Effects of various modifications on the static longitudinal stability and control characteristics of a 0.065-scale model of the Chance Vought Regulus II missile at a Mach number of 2.01: TED No. NACA AD 398

Report presenting an investigation in the 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel to determine the effects on the static longitudinal stability and control characteristics of various modifications to a 0.065-scale model of the Chance Vought Regulus II missile. Some of the modifications included control housing on top of the fuselage, two sizes of canard surfaces with fixed incidence angles, various angles of nose droop, and two types of inlet boundary-layer bleed diverters.
Date: September 26, 1955
Creator: Robinson, Ross B. & Driver, Cornelius
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight determination of minimum drag of 0.11-scale rocket-boosted model of the Chance Vought XF8U-1 airplane with modified fuselage area distribution and faired inlet at Mach number from 0.82 to 1.68 : TED No. NACA DE 392 (open access)

Flight determination of minimum drag of 0.11-scale rocket-boosted model of the Chance Vought XF8U-1 airplane with modified fuselage area distribution and faired inlet at Mach number from 0.82 to 1.68 : TED No. NACA DE 392

Report presenting a flight test conducted to determine the minimum drag of a 0.11-scale rocket-boosted model of the Chance Vought XF8U-1 airplane with a transonic-area-rule fuselage-cross-sectional-area development. Results regarding the trim normal-force coefficient and measured drag are provided.
Date: September 26, 1955
Creator: Hastings, Earl C., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic characteristics and pressure distributions of a 6-percent-thick 49 degree sweptback wing with blowing over half-span and full-span flaps (open access)

Aerodynamic characteristics and pressure distributions of a 6-percent-thick 49 degree sweptback wing with blowing over half-span and full-span flaps

From Introduction: "The investigation reported herein was initiated to define further the effects on the aerodynamic characteristics and load distribution of a thin, sweptback wing of a low-pressure blowing system and also to provide information on which to base a more thorough study of a complete airplane configuration."
Date: September 20, 1955
Creator: Whittle, Edward F., Jr. & McLemore, H. Clyde
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison Between Analytical and Wind-Tunnel Results on Flutter of Several Low-Aspect-Ratio, High-Density, Unswept Wings at High Subsonic Speeds and Zero Angle of Attack (open access)

Comparison Between Analytical and Wind-Tunnel Results on Flutter of Several Low-Aspect-Ratio, High-Density, Unswept Wings at High Subsonic Speeds and Zero Angle of Attack

Memorandum presenting experimental flutter Mach numbers for several solid, thin, rectangular cantilever wings with uniform section properties, low aspect ratio, and high relative density estimated from the results of previous tests at zero angle of attack. The experimental values are considered estimates, rather than determinations, in the high subsonic speed range because in that range the amplitude criterion was necessarily arbitrary. Results regarding conservatism of standard analysis relative to the experiment, closeness of analytical and experimental results, and interpretation of the analytical and experimental uncertainties are provided.
Date: September 20, 1955
Creator: Warner, Robert W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-Flight Tests to Determine the Power-on and Power-Off Pressure Distribution and Drag of the NACA RM-10 Research Vehicle at Large Reynolds Numbers Between Mach Numbers 0.8 and 3.0 (open access)

Free-Flight Tests to Determine the Power-on and Power-Off Pressure Distribution and Drag of the NACA RM-10 Research Vehicle at Large Reynolds Numbers Between Mach Numbers 0.8 and 3.0

Memorandum presenting an investigation of the effect of a propulsive jet on the drag and pressure distribution of the NACA RM-10 missile configuration at large Reynolds numbers that utilized rocket models between Mach numbers 0.8 and 3.0. Pressures were measured along the body, near the fin root, and at the base. Results regarding basic data, body pressures, fin pressures, and drag are provided.
Date: September 20, 1955
Creator: Hoffman, Sherwood
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Effects of Windshield Shape and Canopy Location on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of Canopy-Body Combinations (open access)

Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Effects of Windshield Shape and Canopy Location on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of Canopy-Body Combinations

"Aerodynamic data have been obtained for a fuselage forebody alone and for canopy-body configurations consisting of four different canopies mounted on a fuselage forebody. Two of the canopies had the same shape and size rearward of the windshield but one had a "flat" and the other a "vee" windshield. The remaining two canopies were located at different body stations and were geometrically similar. The data indicated that the drag of the flat-windshield model was consistently lower than that of the vee-windshield model" (p. 1).
Date: September 20, 1955
Creator: Cornette, Elden S. & Robinson, Harold L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Evaluation of a Rolleron-Roll-Rate-Stabilization System for a Canard Missile Configuration at Mach Numbers From 0.9 to 2.3 (open access)

An Evaluation of a Rolleron-Roll-Rate-Stabilization System for a Canard Missile Configuration at Mach Numbers From 0.9 to 2.3

Report presenting a linear stability analysis and flight-test investigation on a rolleron-roll-rate stabilization system for a canard missile. This type of damper provides roll damping by the action of gyro-actuated uncoupled wing-tip ailerons. A dynamic roll instability predicted by the analysis was confirmed by flight testing and was subsequently eliminated by introducing control-surface damping about the rolleron hinge line.
Date: September 15, 1955
Creator: Nason, Martin L.; Brown, Clarence A., Jr. & Rock, Rupert S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Characteristics at Transonic and Supersonic Speeds of a Rocket-Propelled Airplane Model Having a 60-Degree Delta Wing and Low Swept Horizontal Tail (open access)

Longitudinal Characteristics at Transonic and Supersonic Speeds of a Rocket-Propelled Airplane Model Having a 60-Degree Delta Wing and Low Swept Horizontal Tail

Report presenting measurements of the longitudinal stability, lift, and drag characteristics of an airplane configuration with a 60 degree delta wing and a swept horizontal tail mounted near the wing plane extended at a range of Mach numbers using the rocket-model technique. Comparisons are made to data form a similar model with the tail mounted above the wing plane.
Date: September 15, 1955
Creator: Peck, Robert F. & Coltrane, Lucille C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Note on Hovering Turns with Tandem Helicopters (open access)

Note on Hovering Turns with Tandem Helicopters

"The source of an appreciable pitching-moment difference between left and right hovering turns for a tandem helicopter is described. The difference in pitching moment results from the difference in rotational speed of the counter rotating rotors with respect to the air while the helicopter is turning" (p. 1).
Date: September 15, 1955
Creator: Reeder, John P. & Tapscott, Robert J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Origin and Distribution of Supersonic Store Interference From Measurement of Individual Forces on Several Wing-Fuselage-Store Configurations 3 - Swept-Wing Fighter-Bomber Configuration With Large and Small Stores. Mach Number, 1.61 (open access)

The Origin and Distribution of Supersonic Store Interference From Measurement of Individual Forces on Several Wing-Fuselage-Store Configurations 3 - Swept-Wing Fighter-Bomber Configuration With Large and Small Stores. Mach Number, 1.61

Memorandum presenting a supersonic wind-tunnel investigation of the origin and distribution of store interference in the 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel at a Mach number of 1.61 in which separate forces on a store, a fuselage, a swept wing, and a swept-wing-fuselage combination were measured. The report presents data on a configuration which simulated a fighter-bomber airplane with a large and a small external store.
Date: September 15, 1955
Creator: Smith, Norman F. & Carlson, Harry W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The origin and distribution of supersonic store interference from measurement of individual forces on several wing-fuselage-store configurations 3: swept-wing fighter-bomber configuration with large and small stores. Mach number 1.61 (open access)

The origin and distribution of supersonic store interference from measurement of individual forces on several wing-fuselage-store configurations 3: swept-wing fighter-bomber configuration with large and small stores. Mach number 1.61

Report presenting a supersonic wind-tunnel investigation of the origin and distribution of store interference in the 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel at Mach number 1.61. Separate forces on a store, a swept wing, and a swept-wing-fuselage combination were measured. This report presents data on a configuration that simulated a fighter-bomber airplane with a large and a small external store.
Date: September 15, 1955
Creator: Smith, Norman F. & Carlson, Harry W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Aerodynamic Loading Characteristics of a 60 Degree Delta Wing in the Presence of a Body With and Without Indentation (open access)

Transonic Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Aerodynamic Loading Characteristics of a 60 Degree Delta Wing in the Presence of a Body With and Without Indentation

Report presenting an investigation in the transonic pressure tunnel to determine the aerodynamic loading characteristics of a 60 degree delta wing in the presence of a body with and without body indentation in accordance with the transonic-area-rule concept. Tests covered a range of angles of attack and Mach numbers. Results regarding force and moment coefficients and curves are provided.
Date: September 15, 1955
Creator: Mugler, John P., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correlation of Vibratory Root Failures and Stress Distribution in J65 Compressor Blades (open access)

Correlation of Vibratory Root Failures and Stress Distribution in J65 Compressor Blades

Report presenting an investigation of the stress distribution in the roots of the first three stages of the J6S axial-flow compressor in order to explain root failures experienced in service. Root failures were producible in the lab when high vibratory stresses were combined with simulated centrifugal loads. Results regarding fatigue tests on the original J6S blade roots and on two redesigned blade roots as well as a comparison of the different root designs are provided.
Date: September 8, 1955
Creator: Meyer, André J., Jr. & Kaufman, Albert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interaction of a Jet and Flat Plate Located in an Airstream (open access)

Interaction of a Jet and Flat Plate Located in an Airstream

Report presenting an evaluation of the interaction between a flat plate and a nearby jet issuing from a convergent nozzle over a range of pressure ratios and free-stream Mach numbers. The effect on the interaction of the presence of streamline, blunt-base, and curved-base fairings between the plate and parabolic afterbody housing the exit nozzle was also investigated.
Date: September 8, 1955
Creator: Englert, Gerald W.; Wasserbauer, Joseph F. & Whalen, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance Characteristics of Several Divergent-Shroud Aircraft Ejectors (open access)

Performance Characteristics of Several Divergent-Shroud Aircraft Ejectors

Report presenting an investigation of ten divergent- and two cylindrical-shroud ejectors to determine internal ejector performance over a range of pressure ratios and expansion area ratios for Mach numbers up to about 3. Results regarding jet-thrust and air-handling characteristics and net-thrust performance are provided.
Date: September 8, 1955
Creator: Greathouse, William K. & Beale, William T.
System: The UNT Digital Library