Serial/Series Title

Language

Maximum Forces Applied by Pilots to Wheel-Type Controls (open access)

Maximum Forces Applied by Pilots to Wheel-Type Controls

"Measurements were made of the maximum push, pull, and tangential forces that could be applied to airplane wheel-type controls for a wide range of fore-and-aft positions of the wheel. The measurements were conducted with several sizes of wheels and several heights of the center of the wheel above the seat. Various one and two-hand grips with pilots both secure and free were studied for each of the two pilots used in the investigation" (p. 1).
Date: November 1937
Creator: McAvoy, William H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance Characteristics of Venturi Tubes Used in Aircraft for Operating Air-Driven Gyroscopic Instruments (open access)

Performance Characteristics of Venturi Tubes Used in Aircraft for Operating Air-Driven Gyroscopic Instruments

"Wind tunnel and flight tests were made to determine the performance characteristics of two designs of commercially available venturi tubes used in airplanes to operate air-driven gyroscopic instruments. Data obtained at sea level may be used to make approximate predictions of performance at higher altitudes. There is some indication that this may also be done for single venturi tubes" (p. 1).
Date: November 1937
Creator: Sontag, Harcourt & Johnson, Daniel P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure drop across finned cylinders enclosed in a jacket (open access)

Pressure drop across finned cylinders enclosed in a jacket

The pressure drop across finned cylinders in a jacket for a range of air speeds from approximately 13 to 230 miles per hour has been investigated. Tests were made to determine the effect on the pressure drop of changes in fin space, fin width, jacket entrance and exit areas, skirt-approach radius, and the use of fillets and a separator plate at the rear of the cylinder. The pressure drop across the cylinder increased as the fin space decreased, the increase being very rapid at fin spaces smaller than approximately 0.20 inch. Fin width had little effect on the pressure drop for the range of widths tested. The pressure drop across the cylinder was nearly halved by increasing the skirt-approach radius from 3/4 inch to 1-1/4 inches, but fillets and a separator plate at the rear of the cylinder had little effect on the pressure drop. The pressure drop across a cylinder with tapered fins was greater than that for a cylinder having rectangular fins with the same effective fin spacing.
Date: November 1937
Creator: Rollin, Vern G. & Ellerbrock, Herman H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight tests of an airplane showing dependence of the maximum lift coefficient on the test conditions (open access)

Flight tests of an airplane showing dependence of the maximum lift coefficient on the test conditions

"Data are presented to show the extent to which the maximum lift coefficient and consequently the minimum speed of an airplane, determined by flight tests, may vary with test conditions. The data show that cl-max may vary as much as 14 percent, depending on the altitude and wing loading at which the tests were made, the position or motion of the propeller, and the rate at which the angle of attack is changing when the maximum lift coefficient is obtained. The variation of the maximum lift coefficient with these factors, which are under the control of the test engineer, shows the need of standardizing the test procedure. A further variation is shown with wing conditions as affected by weathering and vibration, factors that cannot be completely controlled" (p. 1).
Date: November 1937
Creator: Soulé, H. A. & Hootman, James A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compression-ignition engine performance at altitudes and at various air pressures and temperatures (open access)

Compression-ignition engine performance at altitudes and at various air pressures and temperatures

From Summary: "Engine test results are presented for simulated altitude conditions. A displaced-piston combustion chamber on a 5- by 7-inch single cylinder compression-ignition engine operating at 2,000 r.p.m. was used. Inlet air temperature equivalent to standard altitudes up to 14,000 feet were obtained. Comparison between performance at altitude of the unsupercharged compression-ignition engine compared favorably with the carburetor engine."
Date: November 1937
Creator: Moore, Charles S. & Collins, John H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library