The N.A.C.A. Full-Scale Wind Tunnel (open access)

The N.A.C.A. Full-Scale Wind Tunnel

This report gives a complete description of the full-scale wind tunnel of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics.
Date: March 13, 1933
Creator: DeFrance, Smith J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of a fuel-injection spark-ignition engine using a hydrogenated safety fuel (open access)

Performance of a fuel-injection spark-ignition engine using a hydrogenated safety fuel

This report presents the performance of a single-cylinder test engine using a hydrogenated safety fuel. The safety fuel has a flash point of 125 degrees f. (Cleveland open-dup method), which is high enough to remove most of the fire hazard, and an octane number of 95, which permits higher compression ratios to be used than are permissible with most undoped gasolines.
Date: June 13, 1933
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Young, Alfred W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Viscosity on Fuel Leakage Between Lapped Plungers and Sleeves and on the Discharge From a Pump-Injection System (open access)

Effect of Viscosity on Fuel Leakage Between Lapped Plungers and Sleeves and on the Discharge From a Pump-Injection System

"Test data and analysis show that the rate of fuel leakage between a lapped plunger and sleeve varies directly with the density of the fuel, the diameter of the plunger, the pressure producing the leakage, and the cube of the mean clearance between the plunger and sleeve. The rate varies inversely as the length of the lapped fit and the viscosity of the fuel. With a mean clearance between the plunger and sleeve of 0.0001 inch the leakage amounts to approximately 0.2 percent of the fuel injected with gasoline and as low as 0.01 percent with diesel fuel oils" (p. 63).
Date: December 13, 1933
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Marsh, E. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wing-Fuselage Interference, Tail Buffeting, and Air Flow About the Tail of a Low-Wing Monoplane (open access)

Wing-Fuselage Interference, Tail Buffeting, and Air Flow About the Tail of a Low-Wing Monoplane

"This report presents the results of wind tunnel tests on a Mcdonnell Douglas airplane to determine the wing-fuselage interference of a low-wing monoplane. The tests included a study of tail buffeting and the air flow in the region of the tail. The airplane was tested with and without the propeller slipstream, both in the original condition and with several devices designed to reduce or eliminate tail buffeting. The devices used were wing-fuselage fillets, a NACA cowling, reflexed trailing edge of the wing, and stub auxiliary airfoils" (p. 143).
Date: December 13, 1933
Creator: White, James A. & Hood, Manley J.
System: The UNT Digital Library