Serial/Series Title

Effect of Nose Shape on the Characteristics of Symmetrical Airfoils (open access)

Effect of Nose Shape on the Characteristics of Symmetrical Airfoils

Tests of nine symmetrical airfoils, having different leading-edge radii, were made in the variable density wind tunnel. Three symmetrical NACA airfoils having maximum thickness-to-chord ratio of 0.06, 0.012, and 0.018 were used as basic (or normal) sections; and for each of these thicknesses one thinner and one blunter nose section were developed. Although the slope of the lift curve varies with thickness, these tests show that for any given thickness the slope is independent of nose radius.
Date: August 1931
Creator: Pinkerton, Robert M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The pressure distribution over a modified elliptical wing tip on a biplane in flight (open access)

The pressure distribution over a modified elliptical wing tip on a biplane in flight

This note presents the results of flight pressure-distribution tests on the right upper wing panel of a Douglas M-3 airplane equipped with a modified elliptical tip having a slight amount of washout. The results are given in tables and curves in such form that the load distribution for any normal force coefficient within the usual range encountered in flight may be determined.
Date: August 1931
Creator: Lundquist, Eugene E. & Rhode, Richard V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A comparison of the aerodynamic characteristics of the normal and three reflexed airfoils in the variable density wind tunnel (open access)

A comparison of the aerodynamic characteristics of the normal and three reflexed airfoils in the variable density wind tunnel

"An investigation was made of the aerodynamic effects of reflexing the trailing edge of three commonly used airfoils. Six airfoils were used in the investigation: three having the normal profiles of the Navy 60, the Boeing 106, and the Gottingen 398, and three having these profiles modified to obtain a reflexed trailing edge with the mean camber line changed to give Cmc/4=0. The tests were conducted at a value of the Reynolds Number of approximately 3,100,000 in the variable density wind tunnel of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. Measurements of lift, drag, and pitching moment were made on each of the six airfoils" (p. 1).
Date: August 1931
Creator: DeFoe, George L.
System: The UNT Digital Library