Serial/Series Title

Month

A review of instruments developed for the measurement of the meteorological factors conductive to aircraft icing (open access)

A review of instruments developed for the measurement of the meteorological factors conductive to aircraft icing

Report presenting a review of the status of instruments suitable for the measurement of the meteorological factors conducive to aircraft icing. Nine instruments which appear to be the most promising for obtaining meteorological data are discussed and recommendations for their continued use and development are provided.
Date: April 26, 1949
Creator: Jones, Alun R. & Lewis, William
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study by NACA Wing-Flow Method of Transonic Drag Characteristics of a Blunt-Nose Body of Revolution and Comparison with Results for a Sharp-Nose Body (open access)

Study by NACA Wing-Flow Method of Transonic Drag Characteristics of a Blunt-Nose Body of Revolution and Comparison with Results for a Sharp-Nose Body

Memorandum presenting a study of a body of revolution with an NACA 1-50-100 nose inlet at zero angle of attack and no internal air flow to study the pressure drag of an extremely blunt-nose body and comparison with previous results for a sharp-nose body. The change from sharp to inlet nose while maintaining the same afterbody shape decreased the drag-rise Mach number from 0.94 to 0.90.
Date: April 26, 1949
Creator: Johnston, J. Ford & Lopatoff, Mitchell
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests of a 0.16-Scale Model of the Douglas MX-656 Airplane at High Subsonic Speeds, 1, Stability and Control Characteristics (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests of a 0.16-Scale Model of the Douglas MX-656 Airplane at High Subsonic Speeds, 1, Stability and Control Characteristics

Wind tunnel tests of the 0.16-scale Douglas MX-656 model were made at low and high subsonic Mach numbers to investigate the static longitudinal- and lateral stability characteristics. The tests shows that undesirable changes in longitudinal stability at the stall were apparently caused by an altered downwash pattern at the tail. The jettisonable nose fins were highly destabilizing. Compressibility effects for the test Mach numbers were not detrimental to the longitudinal- or lateral-stability characteristics.
Date: April 26, 1949
Creator: Hamilton, William T. & Cleary, Joseph W.
System: The UNT Digital Library