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Investigation in the 7-by-10 Foot Wind Tunnel of Ducts for Cooling Radiators within an Airplane Wing (open access)

Investigation in the 7-by-10 Foot Wind Tunnel of Ducts for Cooling Radiators within an Airplane Wing

Report presents the results of an investigation made in the NACA 7 by 10-foot wind tunnel of a large-chord wing model with a duct to house a simulated radiator suitable for a liquid-cooled engine. The duct was expanded to reduce the radiator losses, and the installation of the duct and radiator was made entirely within the wing to reduce form and interference drag. The tests were made using a two-dimensional-flow setup with a full-span duct and radiator. Section aerodynamic characteristics of the basic airfoil are given and also curves showing the characteristics of the various duct-radiator combinations.
Date: June 9, 1938
Creator: Harris, Thomas A. & Recant, Isidore G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Continuous Weathering on Light Metal Alloys Used in Aircraft (open access)

The Effect of Continuous Weathering on Light Metal Alloys Used in Aircraft

"An investigation of the corrosion of light metal alloys used in aircraft was begun at the National Bureau of Standards in 1925 and has for its purpose causes of corrosion in aluminum-rich and magnesium-rich alloys together with the development of methods for its prevention. The results, obtained in an extensive series of laboratory and weather-exposure tests, reveal the relative durability of a number of commercially available materials and the extent to which the application of various surface coatings of oxide alone and with paint coatings afforded additional protection. The paper may be considered as a supplement to NACA report 490" (p. 395).
Date: December 2, 1938
Creator: Mutchler, Willard
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of an NACA 23012 Airfoil with Various Arrangements of Slotted Flaps (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of an NACA 23012 Airfoil with Various Arrangements of Slotted Flaps

"An investigation was made in the 7 by 10-foot wind tunnel and in the variable-density wind tunnel of the NACA 23012 airfoil with various slotted-flap arrangements. The purpose of the investigation in the 7 by 10-foot wind tunnel was to determine the airfoil section aerodynamic characteristics as affected by flap shape, slot shape, and flap location. The flap position for maximum lift; polars for arrangements favorable for take-off and climb; and complete lift, drag, and pitching-moment characteristics for selected optimum arrangements were determined" (p. 1).
Date: February 12, 1938
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J. & Harris, Thomas A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Column Strength of Two Extruded Aluminum-Alloy H-Sections (open access)

The Column Strength of Two Extruded Aluminum-Alloy H-Sections

"Extruded aluminum-alloy members of various cross sections are used in aircraft as compression members either singly or as stiffeners for aluminum-alloy sheet. In order to design such members, it is necessary to know their column strength or, in the case of stiffeners, the value of the double modulus, which is best obtained for practical purposes from column tests. Column tests made on two extruded h-sections are described, and column formulas and formulas for the ratio of the double modulus to Young's modulus, based on the tests, are given" (p. 289).
Date: September 30, 1938
Creator: Osgood, William R. & Holt, Marshall
System: The UNT Digital Library
The influence of directed air flow on combustion in spark-ignition engine (open access)

The influence of directed air flow on combustion in spark-ignition engine

"The air movement within the cylinder of the NACA combustion apparatus was regulated by using shrouded inlet valves and by fairing the inlet passage. Rates of combustion were determined at different inlet-air velocities with the engine speed maintained constant and at different engine speeds with the inlet-air velocity maintained approximately constant. The rate of combustion increased when the engine speed was doubled without changing the inlet-air velocity; the observed increase was about the same as the increase in the rate of combustion obtained by doubling the inlet-air velocity without changing the engine speed" (p. 313).
Date: October 10, 1938
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Spencer, R. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanism of flutter: A theoretical and experimental investigation of the flutter problem (open access)

Mechanism of flutter: A theoretical and experimental investigation of the flutter problem

From Summary: "The results of the basic flutter theory originally devised in 1934 and published as NACA Technical Report no. 496 are presented in a simpler and more complete form convenient for further studies. The paper attempts to facilitate the judgement of flutter problems by a systematic survey of the theoretical effects of the various parameters. A large number of experiments were conducted on cantilever wings, with and without ailerons, in the NACA high-speed wind tunnel for the purpose of verifying the theory and to study its adaptability to three-dimensional problems."
Date: September 22, 1938
Creator: Theodorsen, Theodore & Garrick, I. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests in the variable-density wind tunnel of the NACA 23012 airfoil with plain and split flaps (open access)

Tests in the variable-density wind tunnel of the NACA 23012 airfoil with plain and split flaps

From Summary: "Section characteristics for use in wing design are presented for the NACA 23012 airfoil with plain and split flaps of 20 percent wing chord at a value of the effective Reynolds number of about 8,000,000. The flap deflections covered a range from 60 degrees upward to 75 degrees downward for the plain flap and from neutral to 90 degrees downward for the split flap. The split flap was aerodynamically superior to the plain flap in producing high maximum lift coefficients and in having lower profile-drag coefficients at high lift coefficients."
Date: January 21, 1938
Creator: Abbott, Ira H. & Greenberg, Harry
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of NACA Cowlings for Radial Air-Cooled Engines (open access)

Design of NACA Cowlings for Radial Air-Cooled Engines

"The information on the propeller-cowling-nacelle combinations, presented in Technical Reports nos. 592, 593, and 596 and in Technical Note 620, is applied to the practical design of NACA cowlings. The main emphasis is placed on the method of obtaining the dimensions of the cowling; consequently, the physical functioning of each part of the cowling is treated very briefly. A practical method of designing cowlings and some examples are presented" (p. 383).
Date: March 5, 1938
Creator: Stickle, George W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Downwash and Wake Behind Plain and Flapped Airfoils (open access)

Downwash and Wake Behind Plain and Flapped Airfoils

"Extensive experimental measurements have been made of the downwash angles and the wake characteristics behind airfoils with and without flaps and the data have been analyzed and correlated with the theory. A detailed study was made of the errors involved in applying lifting-line theory, such as the effects of a finite wing chord, the rolling-up of the trailing vortex sheet, and the wake. The downwash angles, as computed from the theoretical span load distribution by means of the Biot-Savart equation, were found to be in satisfactory agreement with the experimental results" (p. 179).
Date: June 23, 1938
Creator: Silverstein, Abe; Katzoff, S. & Bullivant, W. Kenneth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air Flow in the Boundary Layer of an Elliptic Cylinder (open access)

Air Flow in the Boundary Layer of an Elliptic Cylinder

From Introduction: "The present investigation was carried out for the purpose of supplementing the earlier work with information on the boundary layer under such conditions of air speed and turbulence that transition occurs and the layer is partly laminar and partly turbulent. In the work reported in reference 1, the air speed was about 12 feet per second, and it was assumed that the boundary layer remained in the laminar condition until after separation because the separation point remained fixed and the pressure distribution about the cylinder was unaffected until an air speed of 15 feet per second was reached."
Date: August 6, 1938
Creator: Schubauer, G. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of air flow in an engine cylinder (open access)

A study of air flow in an engine cylinder

A 4-stroke-cycle test engine was equipped with a glass cylinder and the air movements within it were studied while the engine was being motored. Different types of air flow were produced by using shrouded intake valves in various arrangements and by altering the shape of the intake-air passage in the cylinder head. The air movements were made visible by mixing feathers with the entering air, and high-speed motion pictures were taken of them so that the air currents might be studied in detail and their velocities measured. Motion pictures were also taken of gasoline sprays injected into the cylinder on the intake stroke. The photographs showed that: a wide variety of induced air movements could be created in the cylinder; the movements always persisted throughout the compression stroke; and the only type of movement that persisted until the end of the cycle was rotation about the cylinder axis.
Date: September 15, 1938
Creator: Lee, Dana W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The knocking characteristics of fuels in relation to maximum permissible performance of aircraft engines (open access)

The knocking characteristics of fuels in relation to maximum permissible performance of aircraft engines

An analysis is presented of the relationship of various engine factors to knock in preignition in an aircraft engine. From this analysis and from the available experimental data, a method of evaluating the knocking characteristics of the fuel in an aircraft-engine cylinder is suggested.
Date: September 14, 1938
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Biermann, Arnold E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests of Two Full-Scale Propellers With Different Pitch Distributions, at Blade Angles Up to 60 Degrees (open access)

Tests of Two Full-Scale Propellers With Different Pitch Distributions, at Blade Angles Up to 60 Degrees

"Two 3-blade 10-foot propellers were operated in front of a liquid-cooled engine nacelle. The propellers differed only in pitch distribution; one had normal distribution (nearly constant pitch for a blade angle of 15 degrees at 0.75 radius), and the other had the pitch of the tip sections decreased with respect to that for the shank sections (blade angle of 35 degrees for nearly constant pitch distribution). Propeller blade angles at 0.75r from 15 degrees to sixty degrees, corresponding to design speeds up to 500 miles per hour, were investigated" (p. 327).
Date: April 14, 1938
Creator: Biermann, David & Hartman, Edwin P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Compressibility Burble and the Effect of Compressibility on Pressures and Forces Acting on an Airfoil (open access)

The Compressibility Burble and the Effect of Compressibility on Pressures and Forces Acting on an Airfoil

"Simultaneous air-flow photographs and pressure-distribution measurements were made of the NACA 4412 airfoil at high speeds to determine the physical nature of the compressibility burble. The tests were conducted in the NACA 24-inch high-speed wind tunnel. The flow photographs were obtained by the Schlieren method and the pressures were simultaneously measured for 54 stations in the 5-inch-chord airfoil by means of a multiple-tube manometer. Following the general program, a few measurements of total-pressure loss in the wake of the airfoil at high speeds were made to illustrate the magnitude of the losses involved and the extent of the disturbed region; and, finally, in order to relate this work to earlier force-test data, a force test of a 5-inch-chord NACA 4412 airfoil was made" (p. 73).
Date: July 6, 1938
Creator: Stack, John; Lindsey, W. F. & Littell, Robert E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design Charts for Predicting Downwash Angles and Wake Characteristics Behind Plain and Flapped Wings (open access)

Design Charts for Predicting Downwash Angles and Wake Characteristics Behind Plain and Flapped Wings

"Equations and design charts are given for predicting the downwash angles and the wake characteristics for power-off conditions behind plain and flapped wings of the types used in modern design practice. The downwash charts cover the cases of elliptical wings and wings of taper ratios 1, 2, 3, and 5, with aspect ratios of 6, 9, and 12, having flaps covering 0, 40, 70, and 100 percent of the span. Curves of the span load distributions for all these cases are included" (p. 1).
Date: July 14, 1938
Creator: Silverstein, Abe & Katzoff, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interference of Tail Surfaces and Wing and Fuselage from Tests of 17 Combinations in the N.A.C.A. Variable-Density Tunnel (open access)

Interference of Tail Surfaces and Wing and Fuselage from Tests of 17 Combinations in the N.A.C.A. Variable-Density Tunnel

"An investigation of the interference associated with tail surfaces added to wing-fuselage combinations was included in the interference program in progress in the NACA variable-density tunnel. The results indicate that, in aerodynamically clean combinations, the increment of the high-speed drag can be estimated from section characteristics within useful limits of accuracy. The interference appears mainly as effects on the downwash angle and as losses in the tail effectiveness and varies with the geometry of the combination" (p. 689).
Date: November 5, 1938
Creator: Sherman, Albert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of an N.A.C.A. 23012 Airfoil with a Slotted Flap and Three Types of Auxiliary Flap (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of an N.A.C.A. 23012 Airfoil with a Slotted Flap and Three Types of Auxiliary Flap

An investigation was made in the N.A.C.A. 7- by 10-foot wind tunnel to determine the aerodynamic section characteristics of an N.A.C.A. 23012 airfoil with a single main slotted flap equipped successively with auxiliary flaps of the plain, split, and slotted types. A test installation was used in which an airfoil of 7-foot span was mounted vertically between the upper and the lower sides of the closed test section so that two-dimensional flow was approximated" (p. 699).
Date: October 31, 1938
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J. & Gauvain, William E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tensile Elastic Properties of 18:8 Chromium-Nickel Steel as Affected by Plastic Deformation (open access)

Tensile Elastic Properties of 18:8 Chromium-Nickel Steel as Affected by Plastic Deformation

"The relationship between stress and strain, and between stress and permanent set, for 18:8 alloy as affected by prior plastic deformation is discussed. Hysteresis and creep and their effects on the stress-strain and stress-set curves are also considered, as well as the influence of duration of the rest interval after cold work and the influence of plastic deformation on proof stresses, on the modulus of elasticity at zero stress, and on the curvature of the stress-strain line. A constant (c sub 1) is suggested to represent the variation of the modulus of elasticity with stress" (p. 539).
Date: November 22, 1938
Creator: McAdam, D. J., Jr. & Mebs, R. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat-Transfer Processes in Air-Cooled Engine Cylinders (open access)

Heat-Transfer Processes in Air-Cooled Engine Cylinders

"From a consideration of heat-transfer theory, semi-empirical expressions are set up for the transfer of heat from the combustion gases to the cylinder of an air-cooled engine and from the cylinder to the cooling air. Simple equations for the average head and barrel temperatures as functions of the important engine and cooling variables are obtained from these expressions. The expressions involve a few empirical constants, which may be readily determined from engine tests. Numerical values for these constants were obtained from single-cylinder engine tests for cylinders of the Pratt & Whitney 1535 and 1340-H engines" (p. 1).
Date: 1938
Creator: Pinkel, Benjamin
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure Distribution Over an NACA 23012 Airfoil With an NACA 23012 External-Airfoil Flap (open access)

Pressure Distribution Over an NACA 23012 Airfoil With an NACA 23012 External-Airfoil Flap

Report presents the results of pressure-distribution tests of an NACA 23012 airfoil with an NACA 23012 external airfoil flap made in the 7 by 10-foot wind tunnel. The pressures were measured on the upper and lower surfaces at one chord section on both the main airfoil and on the flap for several different flap deflections and at several angles of attack. A test installation was used in which the airfoil was mounted horizontally in the wind tunnel between vertical end planes so that two-dimensional flow was approximated.
Date: 1938
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of the torque equilibrium of an autogiro rotor (open access)

A study of the torque equilibrium of an autogiro rotor

From Summary: "Two improvements have been made in the method developed in NACA Reports nos. 487 and 591 for the estimation of the inflow velocity required to overcome a given decelerating torque in an autogiro rotor. At low tip-speed ratios, where the assumptions necessary for the analytical integrations of the earlier papers are valid, the expressions therein derived are greatly simplified by combining and eliminating terms with a view of minimizing the numerical computations required. At high tip-speed ratios, by means of charts based on graphical integrations, errors inherent in the assumptions associated with the analytical method are largely eliminated."
Date: January 10, 1938
Creator: Bailey, F. J., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-Dimensional Subsonic Compressible Flow Past Elliptic Cylinders (open access)

Two-Dimensional Subsonic Compressible Flow Past Elliptic Cylinders

"The method of Poggi is used to calculate, for perfect fluids, the effect of compressibility upon the flow on the surface of an elliptic cylinder at zero angle of attack and with no circulation. The result is expressed in a closed form and represents a rigorous determination of the velocity of the fluid at the surface of the obstacle insofar as the second approximation is concerned. Comparison is made with Hooker's treatment of the same problem according to the method of Janzen and Rayleight and it is found that, for thick elliptic cylinders, the two methods agree very well" (p. 245).
Date: February 11, 1938
Creator: Kaplan, Carl
System: The UNT Digital Library
On some reciprocal relations in the theory of nonstationary flows (open access)

On some reciprocal relations in the theory of nonstationary flows

In the theory of nonstationary flows about airfoils, the "indicial lift" function ksub1(s) of Wagner and the "alternating lift" function c(k) of Theodorsen have fundamental significance. This paper reports on some interesting relations of the nature of Fourier transforms that exist between these functions. General problems in transient flows about airfoils may be given a unified broad treatment when these functions are employed. Certain approximate results also are reported which are of notable simplicity, and an analogy with transient electrical flows is drawn.
Date: March 28, 1938
Creator: Garrick, I. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Airfoil section characteristics as applied to the prediction of air forces and their distribution on wings (open access)

Airfoil section characteristics as applied to the prediction of air forces and their distribution on wings

From Introduction: "The system presented herein yields, within the limitations of our present knowledge of aerodynamics, a general solution of the resultant wing forces and moments and their distribution. For the sake of completeness and facility in use, the report contains a table of the important section parameters for many commonly used sections and all other necessary data required to solve the most practical design problems coming within the scope of the system."
Date: 1938
Creator: Jacobs, Eastman N. & Rhode, R. V.
System: The UNT Digital Library