439 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Strain-Gage Measurements of Buffeting Loads on a Jet-Powered Bomber Airplane (open access)

Strain-Gage Measurements of Buffeting Loads on a Jet-Powered Bomber Airplane

Buffet boundaries, buffeting-load increments for the stabilizers and elevators, and buffeting bending-moment increments for the stabilizers and wings as measured in gradual maneuvers for a jet-powered bomber airplane are presented. The buffeting-load increments were determined from strain-gage measurements at the roots or hinge supports of the various surfaces considered. The Mach numbers of the tests ranged from 0.19 to 0.78 at altitudes close to 30,000 feet. The predominant buffet frequencies were close to the natural frequencies of the structural components. The buffeting-load data, when extrapolated to low-altitude conditions, indicated loads on the elevators and stabilizers near the design limit loads. When the airplane was held in buffeting, the load increments were larger than when recovery was made immediately.
Date: March 19, 1951
Creator: Aiken, William S., Jr. & See, John A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drag Measurements of Symmetrical Circular-Arc and NACA 65-009 Rectangular Airfoils Having an Aspect Ratio of 2.7 as Determined by Flight Tests at Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Drag Measurements of Symmetrical Circular-Arc and NACA 65-009 Rectangular Airfoils Having an Aspect Ratio of 2.7 as Determined by Flight Tests at Supersonic Speeds

Report discussing testing to determine the drag characteristics at zero lift of a wing with a circular-arc airfoil section with a maximum thickness of 9 percent chord. The results were compared to previous testing on an NACA 65-009 airfoil. It was found that the NACA airfoil had lower drag coefficients than the circular-arc airfoil tested in this experiment.
Date: March 7, 1947
Creator: Alexander, Sidney R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Static Aerodynamic Forces and Moments at High Subsonic Speeds on a Missile Model During Simulated Launching From Unswept-, Sweptback-, and Modified-Delta-Wing-Fuselage Combinations at Zero Sideslip (open access)

Experimental Static Aerodynamic Forces and Moments at High Subsonic Speeds on a Missile Model During Simulated Launching From Unswept-, Sweptback-, and Modified-Delta-Wing-Fuselage Combinations at Zero Sideslip

Report presenting an investigation in the high-speed tunnel to determine the static aerodynamic forces and moments on a missile model during simulated launching from midsemispan locations of various types of wings. The purpose of the investigation is to determine the nature and origin of the mutual interference experienced by various combinations of wing-fuselage models and externally carried missiles. Results regarding isolated missile characteristics, the effect of varying chordwise position, effects of angle of attack and Mach number, effect of airplane wing geometric characteristics, effect of missile spanwise location, and comparison of wing-fuselage and fuselage effects on the missile forces and moments are provided.
Date: March 19, 1957
Creator: Alford, William J., Jr. & King, Thomas J., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Problems of performance and heating of hypersonic vehicles (open access)

Problems of performance and heating of hypersonic vehicles

Report presenting a comparison of three hypervelocity vehicles: a ballistic rocket, a skip rocket, and a rocket glider. Range efficiency, automatic heating, and problems of glide rockets are explored.
Date: March 5, 1956
Creator: Allen, H. Julian & Neice, Stanford E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics of flow over inclined bodies of revolution (open access)

Characteristics of flow over inclined bodies of revolution

From Summary: "Experimental force, moment, and center-of-pressure variations for a large number of bodies of revolution have been compared with the calculated characteristics based on the approximate theory developed in NACA-RM-A9I26. The bodies varied in fineness ratio from 4.5 to 21.1, from blunt unboattailed bodies to airship hulls, and the experimental results are given for widely varying Mach number ranges of angle of attack. It is shown that the lift and drag characteristics are fairly accurately predicted by the theory but that the actual center of pressure is more rearward than the theory indicates."
Date: March 5, 1951
Creator: Allen, H. Julian & Perkins, Edward W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method for the analysis of compounds containing boron, carbon, and hydrogen (open access)

A method for the analysis of compounds containing boron, carbon, and hydrogen

Report presenting a method for analyzing each of the elements, boron, carbon, and hydrogen from the quantitative analysis of a single sample of an organoboron compound. The method is helpful for the analysis of volatile hydrocarbons and polynuclear aromatic compounds.
Date: March 3, 1955
Creator: Allen, Harrison, Jr. & Tannenbaum, Stanley
System: The UNT Digital Library
Force and pressure recovery characteristics at supersonic speeds of a conical spike inlet with a bypass discharging from the top or bottom of the diffuser in an axial direction (open access)

Force and pressure recovery characteristics at supersonic speeds of a conical spike inlet with a bypass discharging from the top or bottom of the diffuser in an axial direction

Force and pressure-recovery characteristics of a nacelle-type conical-spike inlet with a fixed-area bypass located in the top or bottom of the diffuser are presented for flight Mach numbers of 1.6, 1.8, and 2.0 for angles of attack from 0 degrees to 9 degrees. Top or bottom location of the bypass did not have significant effects on diffuser pressure-recovery, bypass mass-flow ratio, or drag coefficient over the range of angles of attack, flight Mach numbers, and stable engine mass-flow ratios investigated. A larger stable subcritical operating range was obtained with the bypass on the bottom at angles of attack from 3 degrees to 9 degrees at a flight Mach number of 2.0. At a flight Mach number of 2.0, the discharge of 14 percent of the critical mass flow of the inlet by means of a bypass increased the drag only one-fifth of the additive drag that would result for equivalent spillage behind an inlet normal shock without significant reductions in diffuser pressure recovery.
Date: March 23, 1953
Creator: Allen, J. L. & Beke, Andrew
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Measurements of Flying Qualities of a Douglas D-558-II Research Airplane During Flights to Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Some Measurements of Flying Qualities of a Douglas D-558-II Research Airplane During Flights to Supersonic Speeds

Report presenting some measurements of the dynamic lateral stability and lateral and longitudinal trim of a Douglas D-558-II in flights up to a Mach number of 1.87 and an altitude of about 67,000 feet. Testing indicated that the airplane flying in low density air at supersonic speeds had poor dynamic lateral stability, which worsened as the Mach number was increased to 1.85.
Date: March 10, 1953
Creator: Ankenbruck, Herman O. & Dahlen, Theodore E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some approximate methods for estimating the effects of aeroelastic bending of rocket-propelled model-booster combinations (open access)

Some approximate methods for estimating the effects of aeroelastic bending of rocket-propelled model-booster combinations

Report presenting methods for estimating the aeroelastic effects and structural requirements of rocket-propelled model-booster combinations that are nearly symmetrical. The methods differ principally in the manner in which booster stiffness, reference axis, and inertia loading are considered. Special conditions and accuracy for each of the three models are provided.
Date: March 27, 1953
Creator: Arbic, Richard G.; White, George & Gillespie, Warren, Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Speed Stability and Control Characteristics of a 0.17-Scale Model of the McDonnell XF2H-1 Airplane (TED No. NACA DE 318) (open access)

High Speed Stability and Control Characteristics of a 0.17-Scale Model of the McDonnell XF2H-1 Airplane (TED No. NACA DE 318)

"High-speed wind-tunnel tests were conducted of two versions of a 0.17-scale model of the McDonnell XF2H-1 airplane to ascertain the high-speed stability and control characteristics and to study means for raising the high-speed buffet limit of the airplane, The results for the revised model, employing a thinner wing and tail than the original model, revealed a mild diving tendency from 0.75 to 0.80 Mach number, followed by a marked climbing tendency from 0.80 to 0.875 Mach number. The high-speed climbing tendency was caused principally by the pitching-moment characteristics of the wing" (p. 1).
Date: March 31, 1949
Creator: Axelson, John A. & Emerson, Horace F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Horizontal-Tail Height and a Partial-Span Leading-Edge Extension on the Static Longitudinal Stability of a Wing-Fuselage-Tail Combination Having a Sweptback Wing (open access)

The Effects of Horizontal-Tail Height and a Partial-Span Leading-Edge Extension on the Static Longitudinal Stability of a Wing-Fuselage-Tail Combination Having a Sweptback Wing

Memorandum presenting an investigation made to valuate the effects of vertical height of the horizontal tail on the static longitudinal stability of a model with a wing with 35 degrees of sweepback, an aspect ratio of 4.5, a taper ratio of 0.5, and NACA 64A010 sections. The investigation also included the effects of adding a partial-span, leading-edge chord extension to the outer portions of the wing. Results regarding the effect of tail height, wing-wake and local downwash measurements, and effect of a leading-edge extension are provided.
Date: March 9, 1954
Creator: Bandettini, Angelo & Selan, Ralph
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial Flight Tests of the NACA FR-2, a High-Velocity Rocket-Propelled Vehicle for Transonic Flutter Research (open access)

Initial Flight Tests of the NACA FR-2, a High-Velocity Rocket-Propelled Vehicle for Transonic Flutter Research

Report presenting initial flight tests of two simplified flutter vehicles. Test results were in agreement with the results of the freely-falling-body test in that the wing failures in the transonic range occurred at velocities greater than the flutter velocity calculated from the two-dimensional theory.
Date: March 4, 1948
Creator: Barmby, J. G. & Teitelbaum, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Test of an End-Burning Solid-Fuel Ramjet (open access)

Flight Test of an End-Burning Solid-Fuel Ramjet

Report presenting a flight investigation of a rocket-launched ram-jet engine incorporating an end-burning solid fuel. Results regarding acceleration, altitude, booster separation, survival time of booster adapter, and air specific impulse are provided.
Date: March 25, 1954
Creator: Bartlett, Walter A., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
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
Temperature Drops Through Liquid-Cooled Turbine Blades With Various Cooling-Passage Geometries (open access)

Temperature Drops Through Liquid-Cooled Turbine Blades With Various Cooling-Passage Geometries

Memorandum presenting the effects of variations in cooling-passage geometry on the relations between heat flow and temperature drops within liquid-cooled turbine blades. Wall thicknesses, blade section depths, and cooling-passage sizes, shapes, and spacings were varied experimentally on a simple electric analog on which are simulated rectangular sections of blades. Results are presented in terms of temperature differences between the cooled-surface temperature and average heated-surface temperature, minimum heated-surface temperature, maximum heated-surface temperature, and maximum temperature at the centerline of the turbine blades.
Date: March 23, 1956
Creator: Bartoo, Edward R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-tunnel investigation at Mach 1.9 of multijet-missile base pressures (open access)

Wind-tunnel investigation at Mach 1.9 of multijet-missile base pressures

From Summary: "An experimental wind-tunnel investigation was conducted at Mach 1.9 to determine the pressures acting on the base of a multijet missile using unheated air and carbon dioxide as jet fluids. The variation of base pressure with jet static-pressure ratio was compared with results estimated for an axisymmetric single-jet model and some correlation was observed."
Date: March 3, 1955
Creator: Baughman, L. Eugene
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Data on the Longitudinal and Lateral-Directional Rotary Derivatives of a Straight-Wing, Research Airplane Configuration at Mach Numbers From 2.5 to 3.5 (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Data on the Longitudinal and Lateral-Directional Rotary Derivatives of a Straight-Wing, Research Airplane Configuration at Mach Numbers From 2.5 to 3.5

Memorandum presenting the results of wind-tunnel oscillation tests to measure the rotary derivatives of a research airplane configuration at supersonic speeds. Measurements were made of the damping in yaw, pitch, and roll, the static longitudinal and directional stability derivatives, the effective-dihedral derivative, the rolling moment due to yawing, and the yawing moment due to rolling. The configuration was found to be statistically stable throughout the Mach number range, although its stability was becoming marginal at high angles of attack at Mach number 3.5.
Date: March 25, 1958
Creator: Beam, Benjamin H. & Endicott, Kenneth C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Speed Cascade Tests of Two 45 Degree Swept Compressor Blades With Constant Spanwise Loading (open access)

Low-Speed Cascade Tests of Two 45 Degree Swept Compressor Blades With Constant Spanwise Loading

Report discussing an investigation of two 45 degree swept blades in low-speed cascade tunnels at a range of angles of attack and various combinations of inlet-air angle and solidity. The isolated wing method used to design the blade predicted the twist distribution and camber shape necessary to obtain an almost uniform spanwise loading.
Date: March 15, 1954
Creator: Beatty, Loren A.; Savage, Melvyn & Emery, James C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of J-33-A-21 Turbojet-Engine Compressor I - Over-All Performance Characteristics at Equivalent Impeller Speeds from 6000 to 13,400 RPM (open access)

Performance of J-33-A-21 Turbojet-Engine Compressor I - Over-All Performance Characteristics at Equivalent Impeller Speeds from 6000 to 13,400 RPM

"The NACA is investigating a series of J-33 turbojet-engine compressors to determine the over-all and component performances and to improve theories of flow through large centrifugal compressors, The production model J-33-A-21 was operated over a range of inlet temperatures from 80 to -40 F and inlet pressures from 14 to 5 inches mercury absolute for equivalent impeller speeds from 6000 to 13,400 rpm. At the equivalent design speed of 11,500 rpm, the compressor had a peak pressure ratio of 3.98 at an equivalent weight flow of 73.4 pounds per second and an adiabatic temperature-rise , efficiency of 0.701" (p. 1).
Date: March 30, 1948
Creator: Beede, William L.; Kovach, Karl & Creagh, John W. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Additional Abstracts Pertaining to Seaplanes (open access)

Additional Abstracts Pertaining to Seaplanes

"About 500 additional references pertaining to hydrodynamic design of seaplanes have been compiled, and the information is presented in the form of abstracts classified under six main headings:GENERAL INFORMATION, HYDROSTATICS, HYDRODYNAMICS, AERODYNAMICS, OPERATION, and RESEARCH. The compilation is an extension of NACA RM No. L6I13, entitled "Abstracts Pertaining to Seaplanes," by Jerold M. Bidwell and Douglas A. King. An author index and a subject index are included" (p. 1).
Date: March 9, 1948
Creator: Bidwell, Jerold M. & King, Douglas A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Facilities and methods used in full-scale airplane crash-fire investigation (open access)

Facilities and methods used in full-scale airplane crash-fire investigation

The report includes a description of the test facilities and methods, crash configuration, layout of crash site, instrumentation, data-recording systems, and the post-crash examination procedure of the fullscale crash-fire investigation, which is part of a comprehensive study of the airplane crash-fire problem.
Date: March 10, 1952
Creator: Black, Dugald O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drag and longitudinal trim characteristics of a low-tail version of the North American YF-100A airplane as determined from the flight test at low lift of a 0.11-scale rocket-powered model at Mach numbers between 0.75 and 1.78 (open access)

Drag and longitudinal trim characteristics of a low-tail version of the North American YF-100A airplane as determined from the flight test at low lift of a 0.11-scale rocket-powered model at Mach numbers between 0.75 and 1.78

Report presenting drag and longitudinal trim characteristics at low lift of a low-tail version of the North American YF-100A airplane as obtained from the flight test of a 0.11-scale rocket model at a range of Mach numbers. Longitudinal stability data and some qualitative damping-in-pitch data are also provided.
Date: March 29, 1954
Creator: Blanchard, Willard S., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of wing-tip turrets on the aerodynamic characteristics of a typical bomber-wing model (open access)

Effects of wing-tip turrets on the aerodynamic characteristics of a typical bomber-wing model

Report presenting wind-tunnel tests up to a Mach number of 0.85 to determine the effects of wing-tip gun turrets on the aerodynamic characteristics of a typical bomber-wing model. Lift, drag, and pitching-moment data are presented for the wing alone; for the wing with the turrets in the clean condition; and for the wing and the turrets with guns and sighting equipment. The turrets had negligible effect on the lift and pitching-moment characteristics of the wing.
Date: March 28, 1949
Creator: Boddy, Lee E. & Sutton, Fred B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measured Effective Thermal Conductivity of Uranium Oxide Powder in Various Gases and Gas Mixtures (open access)

Measured Effective Thermal Conductivity of Uranium Oxide Powder in Various Gases and Gas Mixtures

Memorandum presenting an investigation of the effective thermal conductivities of powders, which included uranium oxide UO(sub 2) powder with a density of 59.5 percent of the density of the solid uranium oxide at a range of temperatures. Helium, argon, and nitrogen gases and mixtures of helium-argon and xenon-krypton gases were introduced into the powder void, and the experimental effective thermal conductivities of the gas-powder mixtures were determined.
Date: March 3, 1955
Creator: Boegli, J. S. & Deissler, R. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library