Serial/Series Title

Strength Tests on Thin-Walled Duralumin Cylinders in Torsion (open access)

Strength Tests on Thin-Walled Duralumin Cylinders in Torsion

This report is the first of a series presenting the results of strength tests on thin-walled cylinders and truncated cones of circular and elliptical section; it comprises the results obtained to date from torsion (pure shear) tests on 65 thin-walled duralumin cylinders of circular section with ends clamped to rigid bulkheads. The effect of variations in the length/radius and radius/thickness ratios on the type of failure is indicated, and a semi-empirical equation for the shearing stress at maximum load is given.
Date: August 1932
Creator: Lundquist, Eugene E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics of an airfoil as affected by fabric sag (open access)

Characteristics of an airfoil as affected by fabric sag

"This report presents the results of tests made at a high value of the Reynolds Number in the N.A.C.A. variable-density wind tunnel to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of an airfoil as affected by fabric sag. Tests were made of two Gottingen 387 airfoils, one having the usual smooth surface and the other having a surface modified to simulate two types of fabric sag. The results of these tests indicate that the usual sagging of the wind covering between ribs has a very small effect on the aerodynamic characteristics of an airfoil" (p. 1).
Date: August 1932
Creator: Ward, Kenneth E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat dissipation from a finned cylinder at different fin-plane/air-stream angles (open access)

Heat dissipation from a finned cylinder at different fin-plane/air-stream angles

This report gives the results of an experimental determination of the temperature distribution in and the heat dissipation from a cylindrical finned surface for various fin-plane/air-stream angles. A steel cylinder 4.5 inches in diameter having slightly tapered fins of 0.30-inch pitch and 0.6 -inch width was equipped with an electrical heating unit furnishing 13 to 248 B.T.U. per hour per square inch of inside wall area. Air at speeds form 30 to 150 miles per hour was directed at seven different angles from 0 degrees to 90 degrees with respect to the fin planes. The tests show the best angle for cooling at all air speeds to be about 45 degrees. With the same temperature for the two conditions and with an air speed of 76 miles per hour, the heat input to the cylinder can be increased 50 percent at 45 degrees fin-plane/air-stream angle over that at 0 degrees.
Date: August 1932
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Biermann, Arnold E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of engine operating conditions on the vaporization of safety fuels (open access)

Effect of engine operating conditions on the vaporization of safety fuels

"Tests were conducted with the N.A.C.A. combustion apparatus to determine the effect of compression ratio and engine temperature on the vaporization of a hydrogenated "safety fuel" during the compression stroke under conditions similar to those in a spark-ignition engine. The effects of fuel boiling temperature on vaporization using gasoline, safety fuel, and Diesel fuel oil was also investigated. The results show that increasing the compression ratio has little effect on the rate of fuel vaporization, but that increasing the air temperature by increasing the engine temperature increases the rate of fuel vaporization" (p. 1).
Date: August 1932
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Waldron, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library