Serial/Series Title

Approximate Calculation of the Static Longitudinal Stability of Airplanes (open access)

Approximate Calculation of the Static Longitudinal Stability of Airplanes

It seems desirable to have some simple method for calculating quickly and with sufficient accuracy: 1) the correct position of the center of gravity; 2) the requisite tail-group dimensions; 3) and the course of the wing and tail-group moments. In out deductions, we will first replace the biplane (disregarding the effect of stagger, decalage and induced drag) by an equivalent monoplane, whose dimensions and position in space can be approximately determined in a simple manner.
Date: November 1926
Creator: Bienen, Theodor
System: The UNT Digital Library
Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute of Moscow, Russia (open access)

Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute of Moscow, Russia

The staff and construction of the Institute are described as well as a variety of experiments and researches being conducted there. The six sections of the laboratory are described, including the Section for Theoretical Researches, Section for Aerodynamic Researches, Windmill Section, Section for Engine-Propeller Groups, Section for Material Testing, and Section for Instrument Making. Special attention is given to the various wind tunnels and testing facilities present.
Date: November 1926
Creator: Margoulis, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Devices for Prevention of Stalled Flight (open access)

Devices for Prevention of Stalled Flight

Memorandum describing warning or correcting devices based on the registering of two distinct factors, the air speed and the angle of attack. The authors of the report define the conditions for the flight of an airplane and then study the causes of stalled flight in the different cases where it can occur.
Date: November 1926
Creator: Mazer, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experiments With a Sphere From Which the Boundary Layer Is Removed by Suction (open access)

Experiments With a Sphere From Which the Boundary Layer Is Removed by Suction

The task of removing the boundary layer by suction consists in producing, in place of the ordinary flow with the formation of vortices, another kind of flow in which the vortices are eliminated by drawing small quantities of fluid from certain points on the surface into the interior of the body. The experiments with a sphere, which constitute the subject of this report, were made early in the present year .
Date: November 1926
Creator: Schrenk, Oskar
System: The UNT Digital Library