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The prediction of airfoil characteristics (open access)

The prediction of airfoil characteristics

This report describes and develops methods by which the aerodynamic characteristics of an airfoil may be calculated with sufficient accuracy for use in airplane design. These methods for prediction are based on the present aerodynamic theory and on empirical formulas derived from data obtained in the N. A. C. A. variable density wind tunnel at a Reynolds number corresponding approximately to full scale. (author).
Date: March 14, 1928
Creator: Higgins, George J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Supercharger Capacity on Engine and Airplane Performance (open access)

The Effect of Supercharger Capacity on Engine and Airplane Performance

This report presents the results of an investigation to determine the effect of different supercharger capacities on the performance of an airplane and its engine . The tests were conducted on a DH4-M2 airplane powered with a Liberty 12 engine. In this investigation four supercharger capacities, obtained by driving a roots type supercharger at 1.615, 1.957, 2.4, and 3 time engine speed, were used to maintain sea-level pressure at the carburetor to altitudes of 7,000, 11,500, 17,000, and 22,000 feet, respectively. The performance of the airplane in climb and in level flight was determined for each of the four supercharger drive ratios and for the unsupercharged condition.
Date: March 13, 1929
Creator: Schey, O. W. & Gove, W. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Span-load distribution as a factor in stability in roll (open access)

Span-load distribution as a factor in stability in roll

"This report gives the results of pressure-distribution tests made to study the effects on lateral stability of changing the span-load distribution on a rectangular monoplane wing model of fairly thick section. Three methods of changing the distribution were employed: variation in profile along the span to a thin symmetrical section at the tip, twist from +5 degrees to -15 degrees at the tip, and sweepback from +20 degrees to -20 degrees. The tests were conducted in a 5-foot closed-throat atmospheric wind tunnel" (p. 567).
Date: March 4, 1931
Creator: Knight, Montgomery & Noyes, Richard W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A New Principle of Sound Frequency Analysis (open access)

A New Principle of Sound Frequency Analysis

"In connection with the study of aircraft and propeller noises, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics has developed an instrument for sound-frequency analysis which differs fundamentally from previous types, and which, owing to its simplicity of principle, construction, and operation, has proved to be of value in this investigation. The method is based on the well-known fact that the Ohmic loss in an electrical resistance is equal to the sum of the losses of the harmonic components of a complex wave, except for the case in which any two components approach or attain vectorial identity, in which case the Ohmic loss is increased by a definite amount" (p. 605).
Date: March 23, 1931
Creator: Theodorsen, Theodore
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydraulics of Fuel-Injection Pumps for Compression-Ignition Engines (open access)

Hydraulics of Fuel-Injection Pumps for Compression-Ignition Engines

"Formulas are derived for computing the instantaneous pressures delivered by a fuel pump. The first derivation considers the compressibility of the fuel and the second, the compressibility, elasticity, and inertia of the fuel. The second derivation follows that given by Sass; it is shown to be the more accurate of the two. Additional formulas are given for determining the resistance losses in the injection tube" (p. 621).
Date: March 6, 1931
Creator: Rothrock, A. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The drag characteristics of several airships determined by deceleration tests (open access)

The drag characteristics of several airships determined by deceleration tests

This report presents the results of deceleration tests conducted for the purpose of determining the drag characteristics of six airships. The tests were made with airships of various shapes and sizes belonging to the Army, the Navy, and the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation. Drag coefficients for the following airships are shown: Army TC-6, TC-10, and TE-2; Navy Los Angeles and ZMC-2; Goodyear Puritan. The coefficients vary from about 0.045 for the small blunt airships to 0.023 for the relatively large slender Los Angeles. This variation may be due to a combination of effects, but the most important of these is probably the effect of length-diameter ratio.
Date: March 2, 1931
Creator: Thompson, F. L. & Kirschbaum, H. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of damping liquids for aircraft instruments 2 (open access)

Investigation of damping liquids for aircraft instruments 2

"Data are presented on the kinematic viscosity, in the temperature range -50 degrees to +30 degrees C. of pure liquids and of solutions of animal oils, vegetable oils, mineral oils, glycerine, and ethylene glycol in various low freezing point solvents. It is shown that the thermal coefficient of kinematic viscosity as a function of the kinematic viscosity of the solutions of glycerine and ethylene glycol in alcohols is practically independent of the temperature and the chemical composition of the individual liquids. This is similarly true for the mineral oil group and, for a limited temperature interval, for the pure animal and vegetable oils. The efficiency of naphthol, hydroquinone, and diphenylamine to inhibit the change of viscosity of poppyseed and linseed oils was also investigated" (p. 679).
Date: March 28, 1931
Creator: Houseman, M. R. & Keulegan, G. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A reevaluaion of data on atmospheric turbulence and airplane gust loads for application in spectral calculations (open access)

A reevaluaion of data on atmospheric turbulence and airplane gust loads for application in spectral calculations

From Summary: "The available information on the spectrum of atmospheric turbulence is first briefly reviewed. On the basis of these results, methods are developed for the conversion of available gust statistics normally given in terms of counts of gusts or acceleration peaks into a form appropriate for use in spectral calculations. The fundamental quantity for this purpose appears to be the probability distribution of the root-mean-square gust velocity. Estimates of this distribution are derived from data for a number of load histories of transport operations; also, estimates of the variation of this distribution with altitude and weather condition are derived from available data and the method of applying these results to the calculation of airplane gust-response histories in operations is also outlined."
Date: March 5, 1956
Creator: Press, Harry; Meadows, May T. & Hadlock, Ivan
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Measurement of Maximum Cylinder Pressures (open access)

The Measurement of Maximum Cylinder Pressures

"The work presented in this report was undertaken at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics to determine a suitable method for measuring the maximum pressures occurring in aircraft engine cylinders. The study and development of instruments for the measurement of maximum cylinder pressures has been conducted in connection with carburetor and oil engine investigations on a single cylinder aircraft-type engine. Five maximum cylinder-pressure devices have been designed, and tested, in addition to the testing of three commercial indicators" (p. 311).
Date: March 30, 1928
Creator: Hicks, Chester W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Jet Propulsion for Airplanes (open access)

Jet Propulsion for Airplanes

This report is a description of a method of propelling airplanes by the reaction of jet propulsion. Air is compressed and mixed with fuel in a combustion chamber, where the mixture burns at constant pressure. The combustion products issue through a nozzle, and the reaction of that of the motor-driven air screw. The computations are outlined and the results given by tables and curves.
Date: March 23, 1922
Creator: Buckingham, Edgar
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method for calculating the aerodynamic loading on an oscillating finite wing in subsonic and sonic flow (open access)

Method for calculating the aerodynamic loading on an oscillating finite wing in subsonic and sonic flow

A method is presented for calculating the loading on a finite wing oscillating in subsonic or sonic flow. The method is applicable to any plan form and may be used for determining the loading on deformed wings. The procedure is approximate and requires numerical integration over the wing surface.
Date: March 14, 1956
Creator: Runyan, Harry L. & Woolston, Donald S.
System: The UNT Digital Library