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A Method for the Design of Sweptback Wings Warped to Produce Specified Flight Characteristics at Supersonic Speeds (open access)

A Method for the Design of Sweptback Wings Warped to Produce Specified Flight Characteristics at Supersonic Speeds

One of the problems connected with the sweptback wing is the difficulty of controlling the location of the center of pressure and hence the pitching moment. A method is presented for designing a wing to be self-trimming at a given set of flight conditions. Concurrently, the spanwise distribution of load on the wing is made to be approximately elliptical, in an effort to maintain low wing drag.
Date: May 11, 1951
Creator: Tucker, Warren A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Propeller charts for the determination of the rotational speed for the maximum ratio of the propulsive efficiency to the specific fuel consumption (open access)

Propeller charts for the determination of the rotational speed for the maximum ratio of the propulsive efficiency to the specific fuel consumption

A set of propeller operating efficiency charts, based on a coefficient from which the propeller rotational speed has been eliminated, is presented. These charts were prepared with data obtained from tests of full-size metal propellers in the NACA propeller-research tunnel. Working charts for nine propeller-body combinations are presented, including results from tests of dual-rotating propellers. These charts are to be used in the calculation of the range and the endurance of airplanes equipped with constant-speed propellers in which, for given flight conditions, it is desired to determine the propeller revolution speed that gives the maximum ratio of the propulsive efficiency to the specific fuel consumption. The coefficient on which the charts are based may be written in the form of a thrust coefficient or a thrust-power coefficient. A method of using the charts is outlined and sample computations for a typical airplane are included.
Date: December 11, 1940
Creator: Biermann, David & Conway, Robert N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preknock vibrations in a spark-ignition engine cylinder as revealed by high-speed photography (open access)

Preknock vibrations in a spark-ignition engine cylinder as revealed by high-speed photography

"The high-speed photographic investigation of the mechanics of spark-ignition engine knock recorded in three previous reports has been extended with use of the NACA high-speed camera and combustion apparatus with a piezoelectric pressure pickup in the combustion chamber. The motion pictures of knocking combustion were taken at the rate of 40,000 frames per second. Existence of the preknock vibrations in the engine cylinder suggested in Technical Report no.727 has been definitely proved and the vibrations have been analyzed both in the high-speed motion pictures and the pressure traces" (p. 223).
Date: September 11, 1944
Creator: Miller, Cearcy D. & Logan, Walter O., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Drag Characteristics of Practical-Construction Wing Sections (open access)

Summary of Drag Characteristics of Practical-Construction Wing Sections

"The effect of several parameters on the drag characteristics of practical-construction wing sections have been considered and evaluated. The effects considered were those of surface roughness, surface waviness, compressive load, and de-icers. The data were obtained from a number of tests in the Langley two-dimensional low-turbulence tunnels" (p. 359).
Date: July 11, 1946
Creator: Quinn, John H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exhaust-stack nozzle area and shape for individual cylinder exhaust-gas jet-propulsion system (open access)

Exhaust-stack nozzle area and shape for individual cylinder exhaust-gas jet-propulsion system

This report presents the results of an investigation conducted on the effect of exhaust-stack nozzle area, shape, and length on engine power, jet thrust, and gain in net thrust (engine propeller plus jet). Single-cylinder engine data were obtained using three straight stacks 25, 44, and 108 inches in length; an S-shaped stack, a 90 degree bend, a 180 degree bend, and a short straight stack having a closed branch faired into it. Each stack was fitted with nozzles varying in exit area from 0.91 square inch to the unrestricted area of the stack of 4.20 square inches. The engine was generally operated over a range of engine speeds from 1300 to 2100 r.p.m, inlet-manifold pressures from 22 to 30 inches of mercury absolute, and a fuel-air ratio of 0.08. The loss in engine power, the jet thrust, and the gain in net thrust are correlated in terms of several simple parameters. An example is given for determining the optimum nozzle area and the overall net thrust.
Date: August 11, 1942
Creator: Pinkel, Benjamin; Turner, L. Richard; Voss, Fred & Humble, Leroy V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Propellers in yaw (open access)

Propellers in yaw

It was realized as early as 1909 that a propeller in yaw develops a side force like that of a fin. In 1917, R. G. Harris expressed this force in terms of the torque coefficient for the unyawed propeller. Of several attempts to express the side force directly in terms of the shape of the blades, however, none has been completely satisfactory. An analysis that incorporates induction effects not adequately covered in previous work and that gives good agreement with experiment over a wide range of operating conditions is presented. The present analysis shows that the fin analogy may be extended to the form of the side-force expression and that the effective fin area may be taken as the projected side area of the propeller.
Date: October 11, 1943
Creator: Ribner, Herbert S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Properties of low-aspect-ratio pointed wings at speeds below and above the speed of sound (open access)

Properties of low-aspect-ratio pointed wings at speeds below and above the speed of sound

Low-aspect-ratio wings having pointed plan forms are treated on the assumption that the flow potentials in planes at right angles to the long axis of the airfoils are similar to the corresponding two-dimensional potentials.
Date: May 11, 1945
Creator: Jones, Robert T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-tunnel investigation of air inlet and outlet openings on a streamline body (open access)

Wind-tunnel investigation of air inlet and outlet openings on a streamline body

In connection with the general problem of providing air flow to an aircraft power plant located within a fuselage, an investigation was conducted in the Langley 8-foot high-speed tunnel to determine the effect on external drag and pressure distribution of air inlet openings located at the nose of a streamline body. Air outlet openings located at the tail and at the 21-percent and 63-percent stations of the body were also investigated. Boundary layer transition measurements were made and correlated with the force and the pressure data. Individual openings were investigated with the aid of a blower and then practicable combinations of inlet and outlet openings were tested. Various modifications to the internal duct shape near the inlet opening and the aerodynamic effects of a simulated gun in the duct were also studied. The results of the tests suggested that outlet openings should be designed so that the static pressure of the internal flow at the outlet would be the same as the static pressure of the external flow in the vicinity of the opening.
Date: September 11, 1940
Creator: Becker, John V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Automatic control systems satisfying certain general criterions on transient behavior (open access)

Automatic control systems satisfying certain general criterions on transient behavior

"An analytic method for the design of automatic controls is developed that starts from certain arbitrary criterions on the behavior of the controlled system and gives those physically realizable equations that the control system can follow in order to realize this behavior. The criterions used are developed in the form of certain time integrals. General results are shown for systems of second order and of any number of degrees of freedom. Detailed examples for several cases in the control of a turbojet engine are presented" (p. 207).
Date: October 11, 1950
Creator: Boksenbom, Aaron S. & Hood, Richard
System: The UNT Digital Library
On Panel Flutter and Divergence of Infinitely Long Unstiffened and Ring-Stiffened Thin-Walled Circular Cylinders (open access)

On Panel Flutter and Divergence of Infinitely Long Unstiffened and Ring-Stiffened Thin-Walled Circular Cylinders

"A preliminary theoretical investigation of the panel flutter and divergence of infinitely long, unstiffened and ring-stiffened thin-walled circular cylinders is described. Linearized unsteady potential-flow theory is utilized in conjunction with Donnell's cylinder theory to obtain equilibrium equations for panel flutter. Where necessary, a simplified version of Flugge's cylinder theory is used to obtain greater accuracy. By applying Nyquist diagram techniques, analytical criteria for the location of stability boundaries are derived. A limited number of computed results are presented" (p. 475).
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Leonard, Robert W. & Hedgepeth, John M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of wind-tunnel and flight measurements of stability and control characteristics of a Douglas A-26 airplane (open access)

Comparison of wind-tunnel and flight measurements of stability and control characteristics of a Douglas A-26 airplane

From Summary: "Stability and control characteristics determined from tests in the Langley 19-foot pressure tunnel of a 0.2375-scale model of the Douglas XA-26 airplane are compared with those measured in flight tests of a Douglas A-26 airplane. Agreement regarding static longitudinal stability as indicated by the elevator-fixed neutral points and by the variation of elevator deflection in both straight and turning flight was found to be good except at speeds approaching the stall. At these low speeds the airplane possessed noticeably improved stability, which was attributed to pronounced stalling at the root of the production wing."
Date: August 11, 1945
Creator: Kayten, Gerald G. & Koven, William
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial results of instrument-flying trials conducted in a single-rotor helicopter (open access)

Initial results of instrument-flying trials conducted in a single-rotor helicopter

"Instrument-flying trials have been conducted in a single-rotor helicopter, the maneuver stability of which could be changed from satisfactory to unsatisfactory. The results indicated that existing longitudinal flying-qualities requirements based on contact flight were adequate for instrument flight at speeds above that for minimum power. However, lateral-directional problems were encountered at low speeds and during precision maneuvers" (p. 1).
Date: March 11, 1952
Creator: Crim, Almer D.; Reeder, John P. & Whitten, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-spinning wind-tunnel tests of a low-wing monoplane with systematic changes in wings and tails V: effect of airplane relative density (open access)

Free-spinning wind-tunnel tests of a low-wing monoplane with systematic changes in wings and tails V: effect of airplane relative density

The reported tests are a continuation of an NACA investigation being made in the free-spinning wind tunnel to determine the effects of independent variations in load distribution, wing and tail arrangement, and control disposition on the spin characteristics of airplanes. The standard series of tests was repeated to determine the effect of airplane relative density. Tests were made at values of the relative-density parameter of 6.8, 8.4 (basic), and 12.0; and the results were analyzed. The tested variations in the relative-density parameter may be considered either as variations in the wing loading of an airplane spun at a given altitude, with the radii of gyration kept constant, or as a variation of the altitude at which the spin takes place for a given airplane. The lower values of the relative-density parameter correspond to the lower wing loadings or to the lower altitudes of the spin.
Date: January 11, 1940
Creator: Seidman, Oscar & Neihouse, A. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability of Castering Wheels for Aircraft Landing Gears (open access)

Stability of Castering Wheels for Aircraft Landing Gears

"A theoretical study was made of the shimmy of castering wheels. The theory is based on the discovery of a phenomenon called kinematic shimmy. Experimental checks, use being made of a model having low-pressure tires, are reported and the applicability of the results to full scale is discussed. Theoretical methods of estimating the spindle viscous damping and the spindle solid friction necessary to avoid shimmy are given. A new method of avoiding shimmy -- lateral freedom -- is introduced" (p. 147).
Date: August 11, 1937
Creator: Kantrowitz, Arthur
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-Dimensional Subsonic Compressible Flow Past Elliptic Cylinders (open access)

Two-Dimensional Subsonic Compressible Flow Past Elliptic Cylinders

"The method of Poggi is used to calculate, for perfect fluids, the effect of compressibility upon the flow on the surface of an elliptic cylinder at zero angle of attack and with no circulation. The result is expressed in a closed form and represents a rigorous determination of the velocity of the fluid at the surface of the obstacle insofar as the second approximation is concerned. Comparison is made with Hooker's treatment of the same problem according to the method of Janzen and Rayleight and it is found that, for thick elliptic cylinders, the two methods agree very well" (p. 245).
Date: February 11, 1938
Creator: Kaplan, Carl
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel and Flight Tests of Slot-Lip Ailerons (open access)

Wind-Tunnel and Flight Tests of Slot-Lip Ailerons

"The slot-lip ailerons developed by the NACA consist of a flap-type spoiler with an adjoining continuously open slot. The ailerons were developed in an investigation of the delayed response, or lag, of spoiler-type lateral controls. This report presents the results of tests of these slot-lip ailerons made on wing models in the 7 by 10-foot wind tunnel, on a Fairchild 22 airplane in the full-scale wind tunnel and in flight, and on the Weick W1-A airplane in flight" (p. 537).
Date: June 11, 1937
Creator: Shortal, Joseph A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Factors Affecting Combustion in an Internal-Combustion Engine (open access)

Some Factors Affecting Combustion in an Internal-Combustion Engine

"An investigation of the combustion of gasoline, safety, and diesel fuels was made in the NACA combustion apparatus under conditions of temperature that permitted ignition by spark with direct fuel injection, in spite of the compression ratio of 12.7 employed. The influence of such variables as injection advance angle, jacket temperature, engine speed, and spark position was studied. The most pronounced effect was that an increase in the injection advance angle (beyond a certain minimum value) caused a decrease in the extent and rate of combustion. In almost all cases combustion improved with increased temperature" (p. 125).
Date: September 11, 1934
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Cohn, Mildred
System: The UNT Digital Library
Working Charts for the Determination of the Lift Distribution Between Biplane Wings (open access)

Working Charts for the Determination of the Lift Distribution Between Biplane Wings

"In this report are presented empirical working charts from which the distribution of lift between wings, that is the fraction of the total lift borne by each, can be determined in the positive lift range for any ordinary biplane cellule whose individual wings have the same profile. The variables taken directly into account include airfoil section, stagger, gap/chord ratio, decalage, chord ratio, and overhang. It is shown that the influence of unequal sweepback and unequal dihedral in upper and lower wings may be properly provided for by utilizing the concepts of average stagger and average gap/chord ratio, respectively" (p. 93).
Date: July 11, 1932
Creator: Kuhn, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Airfoil section characteristics as affected by protuberances (open access)

Airfoil section characteristics as affected by protuberances

From Introduction: "The present report deals with another phase of the investigation; that is, the effects on airfoil section characteristics of protuberances extending along the entire span from the airfoil surface."
Date: July 11, 1932
Creator: Jacobs, Eastman N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An analysis of base pressure at supersonic velocities and comparison with experiment (open access)

An analysis of base pressure at supersonic velocities and comparison with experiment

From Introduction: "The primary purpose of the investigation described in the present described in the present report is to formulate a method which is of value for qualitative calculations of base pressure both on airfoils and bodies."
Date: May 11, 1951
Creator: Chapman, Dean R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of variation of chord and span of ailerons on hinge moments at several angles of pitch (open access)

Effect of variation of chord and span of ailerons on hinge moments at several angles of pitch

This report presents the results of an investigation of the hinge moments of ailerons of various chords and spans on two airfoils having the Clark Y and USA-27 wing sections, supplementing the investigations described in NACA-TR-298 and NACA-TR-343, of the rolling and yawing moments due to similar ailerons on these two airfoil sections. The measurements were made at various angles of pitch, but at zero angle of roll and yaw, the wing chord being set at an angle of +4 degrees to the fuselage axis.
Date: August 11, 1930
Creator: Monish, B. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coefficients of discharge of fuel-injection nozzles for compression-ignition engines (open access)

Coefficients of discharge of fuel-injection nozzles for compression-ignition engines

"This report presents the results of an investigation to determine the coefficients of discharge of nozzles with small, round orifices of the size used with high-speed compression-ignition engines. The injection pressures and chamber back pressures employed were comparable to those existing in compression-ignition engines during injection. The construction of the nozzles was varied to determine the effect of the nozzle design on the coefficient. Tests were also made with nozzles assembled in an automatic injection valve, both with a plain and with a helically grooved stem" (p. 193).
Date: September 11, 1930
Creator: Gelalles, A. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The comparative performance of an aviation engine at normal and high inlet air temperatures (open access)

The comparative performance of an aviation engine at normal and high inlet air temperatures

"This report presents some results obtained during an investigation to determine the effect of high inlet air temperature on the performance of a Liberty 12 aviation engine. The purpose of this investigation was to ascertain, for normal service carburetor adjustments and a fixed ignition advance, the relation between power and temperature for the range of carburetor air temperatures that may be encountered when supercharging to sea level pressure at altitudes of over 20,000 feet and without intercooling when using plain aviation gasoline and mixtures of benzol and gasoline" (p. 409).
Date: February 11, 1927
Creator: Gardiner, Arthur W. & Schey, Oscar W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Normal Component of the Induced Velocity in the Vicinity of a Lifting Rotor and Some Examples of Its Application (open access)

The Normal Component of the Induced Velocity in the Vicinity of a Lifting Rotor and Some Examples of Its Application

"Paper presents a practical method for computing the approximate values of the normal component of the induced velocity at points in the flow field of a lifting rotor. Tables and graphs of the relative magnitudes of the normal component of the induced velocity are given for selected points in the longitudinal plane of symmetry of the rotor and on the lateral rotor axis. A method is also presented for utilizing the tables and graphs to determine the interference induced velocities arising from the second rotor of a tandem or side-by-side-rotor helicopter and the induced flow angle at a horizontal tail plane" (p. 1).
Date: August 11, 1952
Creator: Castles, Walter, Jr. & De Leeuw, Jacob Henri
System: The UNT Digital Library