Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Wing Inlets for a Four-Engine Airplane (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Wing Inlets for a Four-Engine Airplane

Report presenting an investigation in the propeller-research tunnel to develop wing-leading-edge inlets for locations between the inboard and outboard nacelles on each wing of a four-engine airplane. Testing was performed on the basic wing and original inlet as well as NACA-developed inlets for two versions of the airplane.
Date: March 11, 1947
Creator: Bartlett, Walter A., Jr. & Goral, Edwin B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary investigation of the combustion of a 50 percent pentaborane - 50 percent JP-4 fuel blend in a turbojet combustor at simulated altitude conditions (open access)

Preliminary investigation of the combustion of a 50 percent pentaborane - 50 percent JP-4 fuel blend in a turbojet combustor at simulated altitude conditions

A preliminary investigation was conducted to determine the combustion characteristics of a fuel composed of 50 percent pentaborane and 50 percent JP-4 (MIL-F-5624A) by weight in a turbojet combustor. A combustor designed to fit the housing of a J33-A-23 turbojet engine was selected for convenience. The fuel was evaluated at two engine conditions simulating altitudes of 40,000 and 57,000 feet, an engine speed of 85 percent of rated rpm, and a flight Mach number of 0.6. The pentaborane blend was initially evaluated in combustors developed for pure pentaborane and diborane reported in NACA RM E53B18 and RM E52L15. The performance of the blend was unsatisfactory in these combustors. A new combustor was then developed which provided combustor efficiencies measured from 91 to 101 percent as compared with efficiencies of 92 to 94 percent previously obtained for pentaborane at comparable conditions. Additional refinements of design details are needed to obtain lower oxide deposits and a more uniform outlet temperature profile; however, the combustor is believed to incorporate some of the design principles required to obtain satisfactory over-all performance with the fuel blend investigated.
Date: March 11, 1957
Creator: Branstetter, J. Robert; Kaufman, Warner B. & Gibbs, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Knock-Limited Performance of Triptane and 28-R Fuel Blends as Affected by Changes in Compression Ratio and in Engine Operating Variables (open access)

Knock-Limited Performance of Triptane and 28-R Fuel Blends as Affected by Changes in Compression Ratio and in Engine Operating Variables

From Summary: "A knock-limited performance investigation was conducted on blends of triptane and 28-P fuel with a 12-cylinder, V-type, liquid-cooled aircraft engine of 1710-cubic-inch displacement at three compression ratios: 6.65, 7.93, and 9.68. At each compression ratio, the effect of changes in temperature of the inlet air to the auxiliary-stage supercharger and in fuel-air ratio were investigated at engine speeds of 2280 and. 3000 rpm. The results show that knock-limited engine performance, as improved by the use of triptane, allowed operation at both take-off and cruising power at a compression ratio of 9.68."
Date: March 11, 1947
Creator: Brun, Rinaldo J.; Feder, Melvin S. & Fisher, William F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Turbulent Convective Heat-Transfer Coefficients Measured From Flight Tests of Four Research Models (NACA RM-10) at Mach Numbers From 1.0 to 3.6 (open access)

Turbulent Convective Heat-Transfer Coefficients Measured From Flight Tests of Four Research Models (NACA RM-10) at Mach Numbers From 1.0 to 3.6

Report presenting an evaluation of convective heat-transfer coefficients from skin temperatures measured along the body of a research model designated NACA RM-10. Heat-transfer data is presented for a range of Mach and Reynolds numbers based on the axial distance from the nose to the point at which the temperature measurements were made. Results regarding the recovery factor, heat transfer, correlation with different aircraft models, and Reynolds analogy are provided.
Date: March 11, 1955
Creator: Chauvin, Leo T. & Maloney, Joseph P.
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
Nuclear Prototype Power Plant Installation in Merchant Ships (open access)

Nuclear Prototype Power Plant Installation in Merchant Ships

Abstract: This report presents the results of a study performed by the Ford Instrument Company, Division of Sperry Rand Corporation, and its subcontractor, Maryland Shipbuilding & Drydock Company, for the Maritime Administration, U. S. Department of Commerce, under terms of Study Contract No. MA-1893, dated March 11, 1959. The purpose of this study is to evaluate various techniques for pretesting and installing nuclear prototype power plants in merchant ships and develop that technique offering the widest general application using time, cost and safety as essential criteria. Acknowledgement is made for the valuable counsel received from personnel of the American Bureau of Shipping, Isbrandtsen Company, Inc., Maritime Administration, Atomic Energy Commission, and the United States Coast Guard.
Date: March 11, 1959
Creator: Ford Instrument Company
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-tunnel investigation of stall control by suction through a porous leading edge on a 37 degree sweptback wing of aspect ratio 6 at Reynolds numbers from 2.50 x 10(exp 6) to 8.10 x 10(exp 6) (open access)

Wind-tunnel investigation of stall control by suction through a porous leading edge on a 37 degree sweptback wing of aspect ratio 6 at Reynolds numbers from 2.50 x 10(exp 6) to 8.10 x 10(exp 6)

Report presenting an investigation of the effects of suction through a porous leading-edge surface in the 19-foot pressure tunnel on a wing with 37 degrees of sweepback of the leading edge, an aspect ratio of 6, taper ratio of 0.5, and NACA 64(sub 1)-212 airfoil sections normal to the 27-percent-chord line. Results regarding the wing without flaps, wing with trailing-edge flaps, and power requirements for porous-leading-edge suction are provided.
Date: March 11, 1953
Creator: Graham, Robert R. & Jacques, William A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Resistance of Various Bearing Materials to Chemical Attack by Nitric Acid and Uranyl Nitrate Hexahydrate (open access)

The Resistance of Various Bearing Materials to Chemical Attack by Nitric Acid and Uranyl Nitrate Hexahydrate

The purpose of this study has been to evaluate the chemical resistance of various bearing materials to solutions of nitric acid and uranyl nitrate hexahydrate with views toward selecting the best material to be used as bearings in Purex submerged rotating equipment.
Date: March 11, 1954
Creator: Groves, Norman D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Smoke studies of secondary flows in bends, tandem cascades, and high-turning configurations (open access)

Smoke studies of secondary flows in bends, tandem cascades, and high-turning configurations

Flow-visualization studies, using smoke, were made of the secondary flows in rectangular bends, tandem cascades, and high-turning configurations. The roll-up of the wall boundary layer of a rectangular bend forms a passage vortex near the suction surface similar to that previously observed for cascades. The vortex so formed then shifts out into the main stream. Because of leading-edge effects, the boundary-layer flows in bends were found to be sufficiently different from the flows in blade rows to make direct application of bend results to blade rows inadvisable.
Date: March 11, 1953
Creator: Hansen, Arthur G.; Herzig, Howard Z. & Costello, George R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a Welding Process for Spire-Can Fuel Elements (open access)

Development of a Welding Process for Spire-Can Fuel Elements

The components for the present aluminum clad, Al-Si bonded, internally and externally cooled (I & E), uranium fuel elements are composed of impact extruded cans and spire caps as shown in Figure 1. This type of component requires two impact extrusions; however, in December, 1957, J. E. Ruffin proposed another design of component in which there was only one impact extrusion. For this component, Figure 2, the spire was impact extruded as a part of the can.
Date: March 11, 1960
Creator: Hanson, G. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thrust and drag characteristics of a convergent-divergent nozzle with various exhaust jet temperatures (open access)

Thrust and drag characteristics of a convergent-divergent nozzle with various exhaust jet temperatures

From Summary: "An investigation was conducted in the 8-by-6 foot supersonic wind tunnel on the effect of exhaust-gas temperatures on the external and internal characteristics of a convergent-divergent nozzle having an area expansion ratio of 1.83. Data were obtained over a pressure-ratio range from 1 to 20 at free-stream Mach numbers of 1.6 and 2.0 for exhaust temperatures of 860 degrees, 1650 degrees, and 2000 degrees R. Results of this investigation indicated that generally both the internal and external performance characteristics were only slightly affected by a large change in jet temperature. The small differences in performance which did occur were predicted satisfactorily from theoretical considerations."
Date: March 11, 1954
Creator: Hearth, Donald P. & Wilcox, Fred A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full-Scale Investigation of a Wing With the Leading Edge Swept Back 47.5 Degrees and Having Circular-Arc and Finite-Trailing-Edge-Thickness Ailerons (open access)

Full-Scale Investigation of a Wing With the Leading Edge Swept Back 47.5 Degrees and Having Circular-Arc and Finite-Trailing-Edge-Thickness Ailerons

Report presenting an investigation to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of a wing with a leading sweptback edge at 47.5 degrees and a 20-percent-chord, 50-percent-span outboard aileron. The wing had symmetrical circular-arc airfoil sections and was tested with a circular-arc contour aileron and a flat-sided contour aileron with finite trailing-edge thickness. The longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics and aileron effectiveness are provided for both types of ailerons.
Date: March 11, 1949
Creator: Lange, Roy H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lawrence Radiation Laboratory Physics Division Quarterly Report: November 1953 - January 1954 (open access)

Lawrence Radiation Laboratory Physics Division Quarterly Report: November 1953 - January 1954

The following report is a quarterly report done by the Physics Division of the University of California's Radiation Laboratory, covering the period of November and December of 1953, and January of 1954. This report discusses general physics research and the development and operation of the accelerator.
Date: March 11, 1954
Creator: Lawrence Radiation Laboratory. Physics Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic Measurements Made During Navy Investigation of Human Tolerance to Wind Blasts (open access)

Aerodynamic Measurements Made During Navy Investigation of Human Tolerance to Wind Blasts

From Summary: "This report presents the aerodynamic measurements made during a Navy investigation conducted in the Langley 8-foot high speed tunnel to determine the actual human tolerance to wind blasts."
Date: March 11, 1947
Creator: Loving, Donald L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight-determined static lateral stability and control characteristics of a swept-wing fighter airplane to a Mach number of 1.39 (open access)

Flight-determined static lateral stability and control characteristics of a swept-wing fighter airplane to a Mach number of 1.39

Report presenting an investigation of the static lateral stability characteristics of a swept-wing fighter-type airplane with three vertical-tail configurations and two wing configurations at an altitude of 40,000 feet over a range of Mach numbers. Data was obtained in several conditions, including constant-heading sideslips and wings-level turns, aileron rolls, and abrupt rudder pulses. Results regarding the sideslip characteristics, lateral control, and control effectiveness derivatives are provided.
Date: March 11, 1957
Creator: Matranga, Gene J. & Peele, James R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of measured and predicted indicated angles of attack near the fuselages of a triangular-wing wind-tunnel model and a swept-wing fighter airplane in flight (open access)

Comparison of measured and predicted indicated angles of attack near the fuselages of a triangular-wing wind-tunnel model and a swept-wing fighter airplane in flight

Report presenting measurements of the local flow angles near the fuselages of a triangular-wing wind-tunnel model and an F-86A-5 airplane in flight using airflow detectors on the fuselages. A comparison of the measured and predicted flow angles is provided. Results indicated that the accuracy of the predicted indicated angles of attack was not sufficient to eliminate the necessity of a flight calibration of a detector mounted on a fuselage.
Date: March 11, 1953
Creator: McFadden, Norman M.; McCloud, John L., III & James, Harry A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An experimental investigation of hollow turbine blades for expandable jet engines (open access)

An experimental investigation of hollow turbine blades for expandable jet engines

From Summary: "An experimental investigation was made to determine the feasibility of using hollow turbine blades in engines designed for short service life. Airfoils were fabricated from sheet material and techniques of welding and brazing attachment were investigated. The airfoils were not intended to be cooled. A principal objective was the reduction of strategic material requirements primarily as a function of direct weight reduction."
Date: March 11, 1954
Creator: Morgan, W. C. & Morse, C. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gas Plated Coatings on Metals and Alloys : Progress Report No. 1 (open access)

Gas Plated Coatings on Metals and Alloys : Progress Report No. 1

The object of this project is to conduct studies on the coating of metals and alloys by the gas plating process. Coatings to be studied consist of chromium on copper; alloys of nickel chromium on copper; molybdenum on stainless steel and Inconel; chromium on stainless steel and Inconel; and tungsten and molybdenum and their carbides on stainless steel and Inconel.
Date: March 11, 1953
Creator: Nack, Herman & Whitacre, John R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Circular Cylinder at Mach Number 6.86 and Angles of Attack Up to 90 Degrees (open access)

Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Circular Cylinder at Mach Number 6.86 and Angles of Attack Up to 90 Degrees

"Pressure-distribution and force tests of a circular cylinder have been made in the Langley 11-inch hypersonic tunnel at a Mach number of 6.86, a Reynolds number of 129,000 based on diameter, and angles of attack up to 90 degrees. The results are compared with the hypersonic approximation of Grimminger, Williams, and Young and with a simple modification of the Newtonian flow theory. The comparison of experimental results shows that either theory gives adequate general aerodynamic characteristics but that the modified Newtonian theory gives a more accurate prediction of the pressure distribution" (p. 1).
Date: March 11, 1954
Creator: Penland, Jim A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
1024 Channel Time-of-Flight Analyzer for MTR Fast Chopper - Operating Manual (open access)

1024 Channel Time-of-Flight Analyzer for MTR Fast Chopper - Operating Manual

Report on the principle of measuring the time-of-flight of neutrons, magnetic-core storage of detector pulses, how pulses are stored, current generator, storage cycle generator, and cathode ray oscillograph.
Date: March 11, 1959
Creator: Petree, F. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressures and Associated Aerodynamic and Load Characteristics for Two Bodies of Revolution at Transonic Speeds (open access)

Pressures and Associated Aerodynamic and Load Characteristics for Two Bodies of Revolution at Transonic Speeds

Report presenting an analysis of results obtained from a transonic wind-tunnel investigation of two bodies of revolution with the same nose shape but two different shapes of afterbody. Results regarding pressure distribution, normal-force characteristics, pitching-moment and center-of-pressure characteristics, and detailed load characteristics are provided.
Date: March 11, 1954
Creator: Robinson, Harold L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solution of Experimental Breeder Reactor Slugs (open access)

Solution of Experimental Breeder Reactor Slugs

From abstract: "A full-scale, always-safe, metal dissolver for Experimental Breeder Reactor fuel was designed, built, and installed for test operation. It was found that the dissolver operated satisfactorily, and feasible operating procedures were established for the dissolution of bare, or jacketed, EBR slugs. Minor modifications of the dissolver design have been required to accomodate [sic] a modified EBR slug, but it is believed that this will not significantly affect its operating characteristics."
Date: March 11, 1952
Creator: Sampson, E. M., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Origin and Distribution of Supersonic Store Interference From Measurement of Individual Forces on Several Wing-Fuselagestore Configurations 1. - Swept-Wing Heavy-Bomber Configuration With Large Store (Nacelle). Lift and Drag; Mach Number, 1.61 (open access)

The Origin and Distribution of Supersonic Store Interference From Measurement of Individual Forces on Several Wing-Fuselagestore Configurations 1. - Swept-Wing Heavy-Bomber Configuration With Large Store (Nacelle). Lift and Drag; Mach Number, 1.61

Memorandum presenting a supersonic wind-tunnel investigation of the origin and distribution of store interference in the 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel at Mach number 1.6 in which separate forces on a store, a fuselage, a swept wing, and a swept-wing-fuselage combination were measured. The store was separately sting-mounted on its own six-component internal balance and was traversed through a wide systematic range of spanwise, chordwise, and vertical positions.
Date: March 11, 1955
Creator: Smith, Norman F. & Carlson, Harry W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
External Environmental Radiation Measurements in the United States (open access)

External Environmental Radiation Measurements in the United States

Report regarding ion chamber measurements made of the external environmental radiation in various location in the United States during the summer of 1957.
Date: March 11, 1958
Creator: Solon, Leonard R.; Lowder, Wayne M.; Zila, Albert; LeVine, H. D.; Blatz, Hanson & Eisenbud, Merril
System: The UNT Digital Library