Transonic wind-tunnel investigation of the effects of indentation on the wing loads of a 45 degree sweptback wing-body combination (open access)

Transonic wind-tunnel investigation of the effects of indentation on the wing loads of a 45 degree sweptback wing-body combination

Report presenting the effects of an angle of incidence of 4 degrees and body indentation on wing loads of a sweptback wing-body combination at a range of Mach numbers. The wing had an aspect ratio of 4, taper ratio of 0.3, 45 degrees of sweepback of the quarter-chord line, and NACA 65A006 airfoil sections parallel to the plane of symmetry. Results regarding the effect of incidence and effect of body indentation are provided.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Platt, Robert J., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Measurements of Section Efficiency, Thrust, and Power of a Supersonic-Type Propeller at Mach Numbers to 0.9 (open access)

Flight Measurements of Section Efficiency, Thrust, and Power of a Supersonic-Type Propeller at Mach Numbers to 0.9

Report discussing testing on a supersonic-type propeller designed for a forward Mach number of 0.95, advance ratio of 2.2, and power coefficient of 0.26. Thrust distributions were found to be smooth and uniform over a range of Mach numbers, indicating efficient operation.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Hammack, Jerome B. & O'Bryan, Thomas C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial inclination of the mixing boundary separating an exhausting supersonic jet from a supersonic ambient stream (open access)

Initial inclination of the mixing boundary separating an exhausting supersonic jet from a supersonic ambient stream

Report presenting calculations of the initial inclination of the mixing boundary separating an exhausting supersonic jet from an external supersonic stream as a function of jet static-pressure ratio.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Love, Eugene S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flutter Tests of a 1/25-Scale Model of the B-36J/RF-84F Tip-Coupled Airplane Configuration in the Langley 19-Foot Pressure Tunnel (open access)

Flutter Tests of a 1/25-Scale Model of the B-36J/RF-84F Tip-Coupled Airplane Configuration in the Langley 19-Foot Pressure Tunnel

Report discussing tests of a model of a B-36J/RF-84F tip-coupled airplane to evaluate the flutter characteristics where bomber-body freedoms are allowed and to obtain information about the dynamic stability characteristics. The variables studied were the skew angle of the fighter-bomber coupling, the fighter longitudinal position, the fighter and bomber loading, angle of sideslip, degrees of body freedom, and number of fighters. Flutter was primarily found to occur when the fighter roll frequency was near the natural chordwise-bending frequency of the bomber wing.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Neely, Robert H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-Flight Investigation at Transonic and Supersonic Speeds of the Rolling Effectiveness of Several Aileron Configurations on a Tapered Wing Having 42.7 Degrees Sweepback (open access)

Free-Flight Investigation at Transonic and Supersonic Speeds of the Rolling Effectiveness of Several Aileron Configurations on a Tapered Wing Having 42.7 Degrees Sweepback

Report presenting an investigation of several aileron modifications in conjunction with a tapered, sweptback wing with circular-arc airfoil sections of relatively large thickness ratio. This testing permits the evaluation of the wing-aileron rolling effectiveness over a range of Mach numbers. Results regarding true-contour ailerons, extended-chord ailerons, and blunt trailing-edge ailerons are provided.
Date: January 11, 1949
Creator: Sandahl, Carl A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Langley Free-Flight-Tunnel Investigation of the Automatic Lateral Stability Characteristics of a Model Equipped with a Gyro Stabilizing Unit that Provided either Flicker-Type or Hunting Control (open access)

Langley Free-Flight-Tunnel Investigation of the Automatic Lateral Stability Characteristics of a Model Equipped with a Gyro Stabilizing Unit that Provided either Flicker-Type or Hunting Control

Memorandum presenting an investigation to determine the automatic lateral stability characteristics of a model equipped with a gyro stabilizing unit that gave response to bank and yaw. Stable flights were obtained with the flicker-type automatic control, and the amplitude of the oscillations was decreased by adding the attachment which provided hunting control.
Date: January 11, 1949
Creator: Schade, Robert O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical and experimental studies of a divided-flow ram-jet combustor (open access)

Analytical and experimental studies of a divided-flow ram-jet combustor

From Introduction: "The investigation reported herein is a continuation of a ram-jet-combustor design program being conducted at the NACA Lewis laboratory. The purpose of this broad program is to establish basic design criteria for combustors operating over wide range of fuel-air ratio with low pressure losses and high combustion efficiency, and to utilize these design criteria in the development of practical ram-jet combustors."
Date: January 11, 1954
Creator: Dangle, E. E.; Friedman, Robert & Cervenka, Adolph J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transonic Flight Tests to Determine Zero-Lift Drag and Pressure Recovery of Nacelles Located at the Wing Tips on a 45 Degree Sweptback Wing and Body Combination (open access)

Transonic Flight Tests to Determine Zero-Lift Drag and Pressure Recovery of Nacelles Located at the Wing Tips on a 45 Degree Sweptback Wing and Body Combination

Report presenting the zero-lift drag of a sweptback wing and body combination with nacelles with NACA 1-50-250 nose inlets locate in the wing tips as determined by flight tests of rocket-powered models at transonic speeds. Results regarding the pressure recovery and the effect of the nacelles on it are also provided.
Date: January 11, 1952
Creator: Hoffman, Sherwood & Pepper, William B., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests at Mach Number 1.62 of a Series of Missile Configurations Having Tandem Cruciform Lifting Surfaces (open access)

Tests at Mach Number 1.62 of a Series of Missile Configurations Having Tandem Cruciform Lifting Surfaces

Memorandum presenting an investigation at a Mach number of 1.62 in the 9-inch supersonic tunnel of a series of missile configurations with tandem lifting surfaces of low aspect ratio and of nearly equal span. Some of the variables investigated were interdigitation angle, wing and tail plan form, and longitudinal location of wing with respect to tail. Lift, drag, and pitching-moment data are presented, together with center-of-pressure locations and tail-lift efficiency factors.
Date: January 11, 1952
Creator: Grigsby, Carl E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation at Mach number 1.91 of spreading characteristics of jet expanding from choked nozzles (open access)

Investigation at Mach number 1.91 of spreading characteristics of jet expanding from choked nozzles

It is demonstrated that the temperature profiles of jets expanding into a supersonic stream are considerably smaller than the temperature profiles of jets expanding into quiescent air. The effect on the wake of varying afterbody geometry is shown to be small. The gross spreading characteristics of jets expanding from convergent and convergent-divergent nozzles in the base of a body of revolution with various boattail configurations at a Mach number of 1.91 are presented.
Date: January 11, 1952
Creator: Rousso, Morris D. & Baughman, L. Eugene
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measured and Estimated Lateral Static and Rotary Derivatives of a 1/12-Scale Model of a High-Speed Fighter Airplane With Unswept Wings (open access)

Measured and Estimated Lateral Static and Rotary Derivatives of a 1/12-Scale Model of a High-Speed Fighter Airplane With Unswept Wings

Report presenting a low-speed investigation to determine the lateral static and rotary derivatives of a model of a high-speed fighter airplane. The purpose was to compare experimental stability derivatives with derivatives estimated for a wing-fuselage combination, a vertical- and horizontal-tail combination, and a complete model.
Date: January 11, 1954
Creator: Williams, James L.
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
Investigation at Transonic Speeds of the Lateral-Control and Hinge-Moment Characteristics of a Flap-Type Spoiler Aileron on a 60 Degree Delta Wing (open access)

Investigation at Transonic Speeds of the Lateral-Control and Hinge-Moment Characteristics of a Flap-Type Spoiler Aileron on a 60 Degree Delta Wing

This paper present results of an investigation of the lateral-control and hinge-moment characteristics of a 0.67 semispan flap-type spoiler aileron on a semispan thin 60 degree delta wing at transonic speeds by the reflection-plane technique. The spoiler-aileron had a constant chord of 10.29 percent mean aerodynamic chord and was hinged at the 81.9-percent-wing-root-chord station. Results indicated reasonably linear variations of rolling-moment and hinge-moment coefficients with spoiler projection except at spoiler projections of less than -2 percent mean aerodynamic chord and angles of attack greater than 12 degrees with results generally independent of slot geometry.
Date: January 11, 1954
Creator: Wiley, Harleth G. & Taylor, Robert T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-speed pressure-distribution investigation of a spoiler and a spoiler-slot-deflector on a 30 degree sweptback wing-fuselage model having an aspect ratio of 3, a taper ratio of 0.5, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section (open access)

Low-speed pressure-distribution investigation of a spoiler and a spoiler-slot-deflector on a 30 degree sweptback wing-fuselage model having an aspect ratio of 3, a taper ratio of 0.5, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section

Report presenting an investigation on a 30 degree sweptback wing-fuselage model in the 300 mph 7- by 10-foot tunnel to determine the effect of flap-type spoilers and spoiler-slot-deflectors on the chordwise and spanwise pressure distributions over the wing and controls. The results regarding the tabulated pressure, section force, and moment coefficients for six spanwise stations and curves of the variation of the total integrated force and moment coefficients with angle of attack for various control projections are provided.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Hammond, Alexander D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance characteristics of cylindrical target-type thrust reversers (open access)

Performance characteristics of cylindrical target-type thrust reversers

From tests on cylindrical target-type thrust reversers, it was found that the reverser frontal area, lip angle, end-plate angle, and end-plate depth had important effects on reverse-thrust performance. Frontal area, reverser depth, lip angle, and end-plate angele had important effects on the spacing required for unrestricted nozzle flow. For reverse-thrust ratios greater than 64 percent, the reversed flow attached to the 7 degree cowl in quiescent air. Swept-type cylindrical reversers were generally unstable. The thrust-modulation characteristics of a cylindrical target-type thrust reverser were found to be satisfactory.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Steffen, Fred W. & McArdle, Jack G.
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