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The effect of cowling on cylinder temperatures and performance of a Wright J-5 engine (open access)

The effect of cowling on cylinder temperatures and performance of a Wright J-5 engine

This report presents the results of tests conducted to determine the effect of different amounts and kinds of cowling on the performance and cylinder temperatures of a standard Wright J-5 engine. These tests were conducted in conjunction with drag and propeller tests in which the same cowlings were used. Four different cowlings were investigated varying from the one extreme of no cowling on the engine to the other extreme of the engine completely cowled and the cooling air flowing inside the cowling through an opening in the nose and out through an annular opening at the rear of the engine. Each cowling was tested at air speeds of approximately 60, 80, and 100 miles per hour.
Date: May 2, 1929
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Biermann, Arnold E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
General Theory of Aerodynamic Instability and the Mechanism of Flutter (open access)

General Theory of Aerodynamic Instability and the Mechanism of Flutter

"The aerodynamic forces on an oscillating airfoil or airfoil-aileron combination of three independent degrees of freedom were determined. The problem resolves itself into the solution of certain definite integrals, which were identified as Bessel functions of the first and second kind, and of zero and first order. The theory, based on potential flow and the Kutta condition, is fundamentally equivalent to the conventional wing section theory relating to the steady case" (p. 291).
Date: May 2, 1934
Creator: Theodorsen, Theodore
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Performance of Jet Engine From Characteristics of Components 2: Interaction of Components as Determined From Engine Operation (open access)

Analysis of Performance of Jet Engine From Characteristics of Components 2: Interaction of Components as Determined From Engine Operation

"In order to understand the operation and the interaction of jet-engine components during engine operation and to determine how component characteristics may be used to compute engine performance, a method to analyze and to estimate performance of such engines was devised and applied to the study of the characteristics of a research turbojet engine built for this investigation. An attempt was made to correlate turbine performance obtained from engine experiments with that obtained by the simpler procedure of separately calibrating the turbine with cold air as a driving fluid in order to investigate the applicability of component calibration. The system of analysis was also applied to prediction of the engine and component performance with assumed modifications of the burner and bearing characteristics, to prediction of component and engine operation during engine acceleration, and to estimates of the performance of the engine and the components when the exhaust gas was used to drive a power turbine" (p. 1).
Date: June 2, 1948
Creator: Goldstein, Arthur W.; Alpert, Sumner; Beede, William & Kovach, Karl
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correlation of the drag characteristics of a typical pursuit airplane obtained from high-speed wind-tunnel and flight tests (open access)

Correlation of the drag characteristics of a typical pursuit airplane obtained from high-speed wind-tunnel and flight tests

In order to obtain a correlation of drag data from wind-tunnel and flight tests at high Mach numbers, a typical pursuit airplane, with the propeller removed, was tested in flight at Mach numbers up to 0.755, and the results were compared with wind-tunnel tests of a 1/3-scale model of the airplane. The tests results show that the drag characteristics of the test airplane can be predicted with satisfactory accuracy from tests in the Ames 16-foot high-speed wind tunnel of the Ames Aeronautical Laboratory at both high and low Mach numbers. It is considered that this result is not unique with the airplane.
Date: November 2, 1944
Creator: Nissen, James M.; Gadeberg, Burnett L. & Hamilton, William T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Thermodynamic Study of the Turbine-Propeller Engine (open access)

A Thermodynamic Study of the Turbine-Propeller Engine

"Equations and charts are presented for computing the thrust, the power output, the fuel consumption, and other performance parameters of a turbine-propeller engine for any given set of operating conditions and component efficiencies. Included are the effects of the pressure losses in the inlet duct and the combustion chamber, the variation of the physical properties of the gas as it passes through the system, and the change in mass flow of the gas by the addition of fuel" (p. 117).
Date: August 2, 1951
Creator: Pinkel, Benjamin & Karp, Irving M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical analysis of various thrust-augmentation cycles for turbojet engines (open access)

Theoretical analysis of various thrust-augmentation cycles for turbojet engines

"The results of analytical studies of tail-pipe-burning, water-injection, and bleedoff methods of thrust augmentation are presented that provide an insight into the operating characteristics of these augmentation methods and summarizes the performance that may be obtained when applied to a typical turbojet engine. A brief description of the principles of operation of each augmentation method is given, together with curves that illustrate the effects of the principal design and operating variables of the augmentation system on the thrust and the liquid consumption of the engine. The necessity of designing tail-pipe burners with a low burner-inlet velocity, a low burner drag, and a high diffuser efficiency in order to obtain a high thrust augmentation and to minimize the loss in engine performance during nonburning operation is illustrated" (p. 593).
Date: September 2, 1949
Creator: Lundin, Bruce T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cloud-droplet ingestion in engine inlets with inlet velocity ratios of 1.0 and 0.7 (open access)

Cloud-droplet ingestion in engine inlets with inlet velocity ratios of 1.0 and 0.7

From Summary: "The paths of cloud droplets into two engine inlets have been calculated for a wide range of meteorological and flight conditions. The amount of water in droplet form ingested by the inlets and the amount and distribution of water impinging on the inlet walls are obtained from these droplet-trajectory calculations. In both types of inlet, a prolate ellipsoid of revolution represents either part or all of the forebody at the center of an annular inlet to an engine. The configurations can also represent a fuselage of an airplane with side ram-scoop inlets. The studies were made at an angle of attack of 0 degree. The principal difference between the two inlets studied is that the inlet-air velocity of one is 0.7 that of the other. The studies of the two velocity ratios lead to some important general concepts of water ingestion in inlets."
Date: November 2, 1955
Creator: Brun, Rinaldo J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-dimensional transonic flow theory applied to slender wings and bodies (open access)

Three-dimensional transonic flow theory applied to slender wings and bodies

The present paper re-examines the derivation of the integral equations for transonic flow around slender wings and bodies of revolution, giving special attention to conditions resulting from the presence of shock waves and to the reduction of the relations to the special forms necessary for the discussion of sonic flow, that is, flow at free-stream Mach number 1.
Date: April 2, 1956
Creator: Heaslet, Max A. & Spreiter, John R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prediction of flame velocities of hydrocarbon flames (open access)

Prediction of flame velocities of hydrocarbon flames

The laminar-flame-velocity data previously reported by the Lewis Laboratory are surveyed with respect to the correspondence between experimental flame velocities and values predicted by semitheoretical and empirical methods. The combustible mixture variables covered are hydrocarbon structure (56 hydrocarbons), equivalence ratio of fuel-air mixture, mole fraction of oxygen in the primary oxygen-nitrogen mixture (0.17 to 0.50), and initial mixture temperature (200 degrees to 615 degrees k). The semitheoretical method of prediction considered are based on three approximate theoretical equations for flame velocity: the Semenov equation, the Tanford-Pease equation, and the Manson equation.
Date: January 2, 1953
Creator: Dugger, Gordon L. & Simon, Dorothy M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Continuous Weathering on Light Metal Alloys Used in Aircraft (open access)

The Effect of Continuous Weathering on Light Metal Alloys Used in Aircraft

"An investigation of the corrosion of light metal alloys used in aircraft was begun at the National Bureau of Standards in 1925 and has for its purpose causes of corrosion in aluminum-rich and magnesium-rich alloys together with the development of methods for its prevention. The results, obtained in an extensive series of laboratory and weather-exposure tests, reveal the relative durability of a number of commercially available materials and the extent to which the application of various surface coatings of oxide alone and with paint coatings afforded additional protection. The paper may be considered as a supplement to NACA report 490" (p. 395).
Date: December 2, 1938
Creator: Mutchler, Willard
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cooling of airplane engines at low air speeds (open access)

Cooling of airplane engines at low air speeds

Report presents the results of a comprehensive experimental study carried out at full scale in the NACA 20-foot wind tunnel, the general purpose of which is to furnish information in regard to the functioning of the power plant and propeller unit under different conditions. This report deals particularly with the problem of the cooling of an airplane engines on the ground. The influence of different nose forms, skirts, flaps, propellers, spinners, and special blowers has been investigated.
Date: June 2, 1936
Creator: Theodorsen, Theodore; Brevoort, M. J. & Stickle, George W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lift and drag characteristics and gliding performance of an autogiro as determined in flight (open access)

Lift and drag characteristics and gliding performance of an autogiro as determined in flight

From Summary: "This report presents the results of flight test of the Pitcairn "PCA-2" autogiro. Lift and drag coefficients with the propeller stopped have been determined over approximately a 90 degree range of angles of attack. Based on the sum of fixed-wing and swept-disk areas, the maximum lift coefficient is 0.895, the minimum drag coefficient with propeller stopped is 0.015, and the maximum l/d with propeller stopped is 4.8. Lift coefficients were found also with the propeller delivering positive thrust and did not differ consistently from those found with propeller stopped. Curves of gliding performance included in this report show a minimum vertical velocity of 15 feet per second at an air speed of 36 miles per hour and a flight-path angle of -17 degrees. In vertical descent the vertical velocity is 35 feet per second."
Date: May 2, 1932
Creator: Wheatley, John B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of the theoretical pressure distribution for twenty airfoils (open access)

Determination of the theoretical pressure distribution for twenty airfoils

This report gives the theoretical distribution of pressure at lift coefficients of 0, 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 for 20 airfoils, calculated on the basis of a rigorous potential theory of arbitrary airfoils. It also provides tables from which the characteristics of the airfoils for any angle of attack in 2-dimensional potential flow are readily calculable. The theoretical values of the angles of zero lift, the lift and moment coefficients, and the ideal angles of attack are listed and some comparisons with experiment are indicated. The results presented may be of value in predicting structural loads and also in a correlation of theoretical pressure gradients with profile resistance.
Date: June 2, 1933
Creator: Garrick, I. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure distribution over a symmetrical airfoil section with trailing edge flap (open access)

Pressure distribution over a symmetrical airfoil section with trailing edge flap

"Measurements were made to determine the distribution of pressure over one section of an R. A. F. 30 (symmetrical) airfoil with trailing edge flaps. In order to study the effect of scale measurements were made with air densities of approximately 1 and 20 atmospheres. Isometric diagrams of pressure distribution are given to show the effect of change in incidence, flap displacement, and scale upon the distribution. Plots of normal force coefficient versus angle of attack for different flap displacements are given to show the effect of a displaced flap" (p. 589).
Date: April 2, 1930
Creator: Jacobs, Eastman N. & Pinkerton, Robert M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The drag characteristics of several airships determined by deceleration tests (open access)

The drag characteristics of several airships determined by deceleration tests

This report presents the results of deceleration tests conducted for the purpose of determining the drag characteristics of six airships. The tests were made with airships of various shapes and sizes belonging to the Army, the Navy, and the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation. Drag coefficients for the following airships are shown: Army TC-6, TC-10, and TE-2; Navy Los Angeles and ZMC-2; Goodyear Puritan. The coefficients vary from about 0.045 for the small blunt airships to 0.023 for the relatively large slender Los Angeles. This variation may be due to a combination of effects, but the most important of these is probably the effect of length-diameter ratio.
Date: March 2, 1931
Creator: Thompson, F. L. & Kirschbaum, H. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Combustion Time in the Engine Cylinder and Its Effect on Engine Performance (open access)

Combustion Time in the Engine Cylinder and Its Effect on Engine Performance

"As part of a general program to study combustion in the engine cylinder and to correlate the phenomena of combustion with the observed performance of actual engines, this paper presents a sketchy outline of what may happen in the engine cylinder during the burning of a charge. It also suggests the type of information needed to supply the details of the picture and points out how combustion time and rate affect the performance of the engine. A theoretical concept of a flame front which is assumed to advance radially from the point of ignition is presented, and calculations based on the area and velocity of this flame and the density of the unburned gases are made to determine the mass rate of combustion" (p. 393).
Date: April 2, 1927
Creator: Marvin, Charles F., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of Second-Order Supersonic Flow Theory (open access)

A Study of Second-Order Supersonic Flow Theory

Second-order solutions of supersonic-flow problems are sought by iteration, using the linearized solution as the first step. For plane and axially symmetric flows, particular solutions of the iteration equation are discovered which reduce the second-order problem to an equivalent linearized problem. Comparison of second-order solutions with exact and numerical results shows great improvement over linearized theory.
Date: April 2, 1952
Creator: Van Dyke, Milton D.
System: The UNT Digital Library