An Approximate Spin Design Criterion for Monoplanes (open access)

An Approximate Spin Design Criterion for Monoplanes

"An approximate empirical criterion, based on the projected side area and the mass distribution of the airplane, was formulated. The British results were analyzed and applied to American designs. A simpler design criterion, based solely on the type and the dimensions of the tail, was developed; it is useful in a rapid estimation of whether a new design is likely to comply with the minimum requirements for safety in spinning" (p. 1).
Date: June 1936
Creator: Seidman, Oscar & Donlan, Charles J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank Tests of a Model of the NC Flying-Boat Hull - N.A.C.A. Model 44 (open access)

Tank Tests of a Model of the NC Flying-Boat Hull - N.A.C.A. Model 44

"A 1/7.06 full-size model of the NC-type hull was tested in the N.A.C.A. tank by both the general method and the specific or free-to-trim method. The results of the tests are given in curves plotted as non dimensional coefficients and are compared with the test results of N.A.C.A. model 11-A. The NC model (N.A.C.A. model 44) shows higher resistance than model 11-A at hump speed but lower resistance at high speeds. Model 44 has a higher best trim angle at the jump and a lower maximum positive trimming moment than model 11-A. At high speeds the best trim angle and the trimming moments of the two models are approximately the same" (p. 1).
Date: May 1936
Creator: Bell, Joe W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests of N.A.C.A. airfoils in the variable-density wind tunnel. Series 230 (open access)

Tests of N.A.C.A. airfoils in the variable-density wind tunnel. Series 230

The results of tests of six airfoils having the N.A.C.A. 230 mean line and varying in thickness from 0.06c to 0.21c are presented. These results agree with previous findings in showing that aerodynamically the best section is one of moderate thickness. The data are of value mainly in connection with the design of tapered wings having sections based on the N.A.C.A. 230 mean line.
Date: May 1936
Creator: Jacobs, Eastman N. & Pinkerton, Robert M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculated Effect of Various Types of Flap on Take-Off Over Obstacles (open access)

Calculated Effect of Various Types of Flap on Take-Off Over Obstacles

"In order to determine whether or not flaps could be expected to have any beneficial effect on take-off performance, the distances required to take off and climb to an altitude of 50 feet were calculated for hypothetical airplanes, corresponding to relatively high-speed types and equipped with several types of flap. The types considered are the Fowler wing, the Hall wing, the split flap, the balanced split flap, the plain flap, and the external-airfoil flap. The results indicate that substantial reductions in take-off distance are possible through the use of flaps, provided that the proper flap angle corresponding to a given set of conditions is used" (p. 1).
Date: May 1936
Creator: Wetmore, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Boosted Performance of a Compression-Ignition Engine With a Displaced Piston (open access)

Boosted Performance of a Compression-Ignition Engine With a Displaced Piston

From Summary: "Performance tests were made using a rectangular displacer arranged so that the combustion air was forced through equal passages at either end of the displacer into the vertical-disk combustion chamber of a single-cylinder, four-stroke-cycle compression-ignition test engine. After making tests to determine optimum displacer height, shape, and fuel-spray arrangement, engine-performance tests were made at 1,500 and 2,000 r.p.m. for a range of boost pressures from 0 to 20 inches of mercury and for maximum cylinder pressures up to 1,150 pounds per square inch. The engine operation for boosted conditions was very smooth, there being no combustion shock even at the highest maximum cylinder pressures. Indicated mean effective pressures of 240 pounds per square inch for fuel consumptions of 0.39 pound per horsepower-hour have been readily reproduced during routine testing at 2,000 r.p.m. at a boost pressure of 20 inches of mercury."
Date: May 1936
Creator: Moore, Charles S. & Foster, Hampton H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of changes in tail arrangement upon the spinning of a low-wing monoplane model (open access)

Effect of changes in tail arrangement upon the spinning of a low-wing monoplane model

"A series of tests was made in the N.A.C.A. free spinning tunnel to find the effect upon spinning characteristics of systematic changes in tail arrangement. The tests were made with a 1/16-scale made of a low-wing monoplane of modern design. The changes consisted of: (1) variation of the fuselage length; (2) variation of the fore-and-aft location of the vertical surfaces; and (3) variation of the vertical location of the horizontal surfaces. The spinning characteristics of the model, including the number of turns required for recovery, were found to vary systematically and regularly with systematic changes in the tail arrangement" (p. 1).
Date: June 1936
Creator: Zimmerman, C. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method of estimating the aerodynamic effects of ordinary and split flaps of airfoils similar to the Clark Y (open access)

A method of estimating the aerodynamic effects of ordinary and split flaps of airfoils similar to the Clark Y

An empirical method is given for estimating the aerodynamic effect of ordinary and split flaps on airfoils similar to the Clark Y. The method is based on a series of charts that have been derived from an analysis of existing wind-tunnel data. Factors are included by which such variables as flap location, flap span, wing aspect ratio, and wing taper may be taken into account. A series of comparisons indicate that the method would be suitable for use in making preliminary performance calculations and in structural design.
Date: June 1936
Creator: Pearson, H. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of Air-Cooled Engine Cylinders Using Blower Cooling (open access)

Performance of Air-Cooled Engine Cylinders Using Blower Cooling

"An investigation was made to obtain information on the minimum quantity of air and power required to cool conventional air cooled cylinders at various operating conditions when using a blower. The results of these tests show that the minimum power required for satisfactory cooling with an overall blower efficiency of 100 percent varied from 2 to 6 percent of the engine power depending on the operating conditions. The shape of the jacket had a large effect on the cylinder temperatures. Increasing the air speed over the front of the cylinder by keeping the greater part of the circumference of the cylinder covered by the jacket reduced the temperatures over the entire cylinder" (p. 1).
Date: July 1936
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Ellerbrock, Herman H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbon-monoxide indicators for aircraft (open access)

Carbon-monoxide indicators for aircraft

Several improvements that have been made on commercially available carbon-monoxide indicators to make them more suitable for aircraft use are described. These improvements include an automatic flow regulator, which permits the use of a simplified instrument on aircraft where a source of suction is available, and a more reliable alarm attachment. A field method for testing instruments on standard samples of carbon monoxide is described. Performance data and instructions in operation and maintenance are given.
Date: July 1936
Creator: Womack, S. H. J. & Peterson, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Combustion-engine temperatures by the sodium line-reversal method (open access)

Combustion-engine temperatures by the sodium line-reversal method

The sodium line-reversal method has been used in some preliminary measurements of flame temperature. Improvements in the method involving a photographic recorder and a means of correcting for the dirtiness of the windows are described. The temperatures so obtained are compared with those calculated from pressure diagrams.
Date: March 1936
Creator: Brevoort, Maurice J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparison of Corrosion-Resistant Steel (18 Percent Chromium - 8 Percent Nickel) and Aluminum Alloy (24st) (open access)

A Comparison of Corrosion-Resistant Steel (18 Percent Chromium - 8 Percent Nickel) and Aluminum Alloy (24st)

"In the selection of materials for aircraft application, it is not enough to make the selection on a strength-weight basis alone. A strength-weight comparison is significant but other factors must be considered, for while a material with a high ratio of strength to weight may be perfectly satisfactory for one use, it may be totally unfitted for another. It is essential, among other things, that the probable nature, magnitude, and direction of the principal stresses be given special consideration" (p. 1).
Date: March 1936
Creator: Sullivan, J. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full-scale wind-tunnel to determine a satisfactory location for a service Pitot-static tube on a low-wing monoplane (open access)

Full-scale wind-tunnel to determine a satisfactory location for a service Pitot-static tube on a low-wing monoplane

Surveys of the air flow over the upper surface of four different airfoils were made in the full-scale wind tunnel to determine a satisfactory location for a fixed Pitot-static tube on a low-wing monoplane. The selection was based on small interference errors, less than 5 percent, and on a consideration of structural and ground handling problems. The most satisfactory location on the airfoils without flaps that were investigated was 10 percent of the chord aft and 25 percent of the chord above the trailing edge of a section approximately 40 percent of the semispan inboard of the wing tip. No satisfactory location was found near the wing when the flaps were deflected.
Date: March 1936
Creator: Parsons, John F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Remarks on the Elastic Axis of Shell Wings (open access)

Remarks on the Elastic Axis of Shell Wings

The definitions of flexural center, torsional center, elastic center, and elastic axis are discussed. The calculation of elastic centers is dealt with in principle and a suggestion is made for the design of shear webs.
Date: April 1936
Creator: Kuhn, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank tests of models of floats for single-float seaplanes - First series (open access)

Tank tests of models of floats for single-float seaplanes - First series

"Large models of the Mark V and Mark VI floats used for single float seaplanes (National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) models 41-A and 41-B, respectively) were tested in the NACA tank to provide general test data for typical single floats and a basis for possible improvements of their form. The resistance of model 41-B was greater than that of model 41-A, either when free to trim or at the best trim angle for each. The resistance of model 35-B (a pointed step hull tested free to trim) was less than either of the models at the hump speed, greater at intermediate planing speeds, and less at the speeds and loads near get-away, although the spray was generally worse owing to the absence of transverse flare" (p. 1).
Date: April 1936
Creator: Parkinson, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Procedure for determining speed and climbing performance of airships (open access)

Procedure for determining speed and climbing performance of airships

From Summary: "The procedure for obtaining air-speed and rate-of-climb measurements in performance tests of airships is described. Two methods of obtaining speed measurements, one by means of instruments in the airship and the other by flight over a measured ground course, are explained. Instruments, their calibrations, necessary correction factors, observations, and calculations are detailed for each method, and also for the rate-of-climb tests. A method of correction for the effect on density of moist air and a description of other methods of speed course testing are appended."
Date: April 1936
Creator: Thompson, F. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank tests of models of flying boat hulls having longitudinal steps (open access)

Tank tests of models of flying boat hulls having longitudinal steps

Four models with longitudinal steps on the forebody were developed by modification of a model of a conventional hull and were tested in the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) tank. Models with longitudinal steps were found to have smaller resistance at high speed and greater resistance at low speed than the parent model that had the same afterbody but a conventional V-section forebody. The models with a single longitudinal step had better performance at hump speed and as low high-speed resistance except at very light loads. Spray strips at angles from 0 degrees to 45 degrees to the horizontal were fitted at the longitudinal steps and at the chine on one of the two step models having two longitudinal steps. The resistance and the height of the spray were less with each of the spray strips than without; the most favorable angle was found to lie between 15 degrees and 30 degrees.
Date: July 1936
Creator: Allison, John M. & Ward, Kenneth E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimation of moments of inertia of airplanes from design data (open access)

Estimation of moments of inertia of airplanes from design data

"A method of determining the moments of inertia of an airplane from design data pertaining to the weights and locations of the component parts is described. The computations required to ascertain the center-of-gravity position are incorporated with the calculations of moments of inertia. A complete set of data and calculations for a modern airplane is given to illustrate the procedure. From a comparison between calculated values and measured values it is believed that the moments of inertia can be estimated within 10 percent by the use of this method" (p. 1).
Date: July 1936
Creator: Kirschbaum, H. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tanks test of a model of the hull of the Navy PB-1 flying boat - N.A.C.A. Model 52 (open access)

Tanks test of a model of the hull of the Navy PB-1 flying boat - N.A.C.A. Model 52

A model of the hull of the Navy PB-1 flying boat was tested in the N.A.C.A. tank as part of a program intended to provide information regarding the water performance of hulls of flying boats of earlier design for which hydrodynamic data have heretofore been unavailable. Tests were made according to the general method over the range of practical loadings with the model both fixed in trim and free to trim. A free-to-trim test according to the specific method was also made for the design load and take-off speed corresponding to those of the full-scale flying boat. The resistance obtained from the fixed-trim test was found to be about the same as that of the model of the NC flying-boat hull, and greater at the hump but smaller at high speeds than that of a model of the Sikorsky S-40 flying-boat hull.
Date: August 1936
Creator: Allison, John M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Friction of compression-ignition engines (open access)

Friction of compression-ignition engines

"The cost in mean effective pressure of generating air flow in the combustion chambers of single-cylinder compression-ignition engines was determined for the prechamber and the displaced-piston types of combustion chamber. For each type a wide range of air-flow quantities, speeds, and boost pressures was investigated. Supplementary tests were made to determine the effect of lubricating-oil temperature, cooling-water temperature, and compression ratio on the friction mean effective pressure of the single-cylinder test engine" (p. 1).
Date: August 1936
Creator: Moore, Charles S. & Collins, John H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full-scale wind-tunnel and flight tests of a Fairchild 22 airplane equipped with a Fowler flap (open access)

Full-scale wind-tunnel and flight tests of a Fairchild 22 airplane equipped with a Fowler flap

"Full-scale wind-tunnel and flight tests were made of a Fairchild 22 airplane equipped with a Fowler flap to determine the effect of the flap on the performance and control characteristics of the airplane. In the wind-tunnel tests of the airplane with the horizontal tail surfaces removed, the flap was found to increase the maximum lift coefficient from 1.27 to 2.41. In the flight test, the flap was found to decrease the minimum speed from 58.8 to 44.4 miles per hour" (p. 1).
Date: August 1936
Creator: Dearborn, C. H. & Soulé, H. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
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
Effect of Several Factors on the Cooling of a Radial Engine in Flight (open access)

Effect of Several Factors on the Cooling of a Radial Engine in Flight

"Flight tests of a Grumman Scout (XSF-2) airplane fitted with a Pratt & Whitney 1535 supercharged engine were conducted to determine the effect of engine power, mass flow of the cooling air, and atmospheric temperature on cylinder temperature. The tests indicated that the difference in temperature between the cylinder wall and the cooling air varied as the 0.38 power of the brake horsepower for a constant mass flow of cooling air, cooling-air temperature, engine speed, and brake fuel consumption. The difference in temperature was also found to vary inversely as the 0.39 power of the mass flow for points on the head and the 0.35 power for points on the barrel, provided that engine power, engine speed, brake fuel consumption, and cooling-air temperature were kept constant" (p. 1).
Date: November 1936
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Pinkel, Benjamin
System: The UNT Digital Library
Piloting technique for recovery from spins (open access)

Piloting technique for recovery from spins

"Systematic flight investigation of the spinning characteristics of various airplanes over a period of several years have given the pilots engaged in the testing a varied and extensive experience. From this experience certain general rules of procedure have been formulated, particularly for the sequence of operation of the controls in recovery from spins, and are recommended to the attention of all pilots" (p. 1).
Date: February 1936
Creator: McAvoy, W. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Considerations of the Take-Off Problem (open access)

Considerations of the Take-Off Problem

Many technical papers on the various phases of airplane take-off have been published. Frequently, however, there appear new ideas which affect only particular scattered phases of the subject and which do not receive individual publication. It is the purpose of this paper to present several ideas of this nature which may be of considerable aid in calculating take-off performance and one idea which should correct what appears to be a popular misconception of the importance of static propeller thrust.
Date: February 1936
Creator: Hartman, Edwin P.
System: The UNT Digital Library