Serial/Series Title

Influence of chemical composition on rupture properties at 1200 degrees F of forged chromium-cobalt-nickel-iron base alloys in solution-treated and aged condition (open access)

Influence of chemical composition on rupture properties at 1200 degrees F of forged chromium-cobalt-nickel-iron base alloys in solution-treated and aged condition

From Summary: "The influence of systematic variations of chemical composition on rupture properties at 1200 degrees F. was determined for 62 modifications of a basic alloy containing 20 percent chromium, 20 percent nickel, 20 percent cobalt, 3 percent molybdenum, 2 percent tungsten, 1 percent columbium, 0.15 percent carbon, 1.7 percent manganese, 0.5 percent silicon, 0.12 percent nitrogen and the balance iron. These modifications included individual variations of each of 10 elements present and simultaneous variations of molybdenum, tungsten, and columbium. Laboratory induction furnace heats were hot-forged to round bar stock, solution-treated at 2200 degrees F., and aged at 1400 degrees F."
Date: October 26, 1949
Creator: Reynolds, E. E.; Freeman, J. W. & White, A. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparative Flight and Full-Scale Wind-Tunnel Measurements of the Maximum Lift of an Airplane (open access)

Comparative Flight and Full-Scale Wind-Tunnel Measurements of the Maximum Lift of an Airplane

"Determinations of the power-off maximum lift of a Fairchild 22 airplane were made in the NACA full-scale wind tunnel and in flight. The results from the two types of test were in satisfactory agreement. It was found that, when the airplane was rotated positively in pitch through the angle of stall at rates of the order of 0.1 degree per second, the maximum lift coefficient was considerably higher than that obtained in the standard tests, in which the forces are measured with the angles of attack fixed. Scale effect on the maximum lift coefficient was also investigated" (p. 161).
Date: October 26, 1937
Creator: Silverstein, Abe; Katzoff, S. & Hootman, James A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Transition Phase in the Take-Off of an Airplane (open access)

The Transition Phase in the Take-Off of an Airplane

Report presents the results of an investigation to determine the character and importance of the transition phase between the ground run and steady climb in the take-off of an airplane and the effects of various factors on this phase and on the air-borne part of the take-off as a whole. The information was obtained from a series of step-by-step integrations, which defined the motion of the airplane during the transition and which were based on data derived from actual take-off tests of a Verville AT airplane. Both normal and zoom take-offs under several loading and take-off speed conditions were considered.
Date: October 26, 1937
Creator: Wetmore, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library