Aerodynamic Investigation of a Parabolic Body of Revolution at Mach Number of 1.92 and Some Effects of an Annular Jet Exhausting From the Base (open access)

Aerodynamic Investigation of a Parabolic Body of Revolution at Mach Number of 1.92 and Some Effects of an Annular Jet Exhausting From the Base

Report discussing an investigation of a parabolic body of revolution with and without the effects of an annular jet exhausting from the base. The aerodynamic characteristics, pressures, lift-curve slope, and other characteristics with the jet in operation and inoperative were compared.
Date: February 8, 1950
Creator: Love, Eugene S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic characteristics of a wing with unswept quarter-chord line, aspect ratio 2, taper ratio 0.78, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section: transonic-bump method (open access)

Aerodynamic characteristics of a wing with unswept quarter-chord line, aspect ratio 2, taper ratio 0.78, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section: transonic-bump method

From Introduction: "This paper presents the results of an investigation of force and moment characteristics for a wing with an unswept quarter-chord line, aspect ratio 2, taper ratio 0.78, and an NACA 65A004 airfoil section parallel to the free stream."
Date: March 8, 1950
Creator: Polhamus, Edward C. & Campbell, George S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Theoretical Investigation of the Dynamic Lateral Oscillatory Stability of an Airplane Having a 60 Degree Triangular Wing (open access)

A Theoretical Investigation of the Dynamic Lateral Oscillatory Stability of an Airplane Having a 60 Degree Triangular Wing

Report presenting a theoretical study of the dynamic lateral stability characteristics of an airplane with a 60 degree triangular wing. Calculations included the determination of the neutral-lateral-oscillatory-stability boundary, the period and time to damp to one-half amplitude of the lateral oscillation, and the time to damp to one-half amplitude for the spiral mode. The airplane was generally found to be stable for all conditions.
Date: March 8, 1950
Creator: Johnson, Joseph L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic characteristics of a wing with unswept quarter-chord line, aspect ratio 4, taper ratio 0.6, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section: Transonic-bump method (open access)

Aerodynamic characteristics of a wing with unswept quarter-chord line, aspect ratio 4, taper ratio 0.6, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section: Transonic-bump method

From Introduction: "This paper presents the results of the investigation of the wing alone and of the wing-fuselage configurations employing a wing with an unswept quarter-chord line, aspect ratio 4, taper ratio 0.6, and an NACA 65A004 airfoil section parallel to the air stream. The experimental results of a wing of identical plan from having an NACA 65A006 airfoil section which was tested as part of the transonic program are presented in reference 1.
Date: May 8, 1950
Creator: Myers, Boyd C., II & Wiggins, James W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic study of a wing-fuselage combination employing a wing swept back 63 degrees : effectiveness of an elevon as a longitudinal control and the effects of camber and twist on the maximum lift-drag ratio at supersonic speeds (open access)

Aerodynamic study of a wing-fuselage combination employing a wing swept back 63 degrees : effectiveness of an elevon as a longitudinal control and the effects of camber and twist on the maximum lift-drag ratio at supersonic speeds

Report presenting an investigation concerned with the measurement of the characteristics of longitudinal-control devices for a wing-fuselage combination with a wing with the leading edge swept back 63 degrees. Most of the investigation was devoted to testing a 30-percent-chord, 50-percent-semispan elevon, but some used upper-surface spoilers. Results regarding the characteristics of the wing with the elevon undeflected and control-surface effectiveness are provided.
Date: May 8, 1950
Creator: Olson, Robert N. & Mead, Merrill H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics of perforated diffusers at free-stream Mach number 1.90 (open access)

Characteristics of perforated diffusers at free-stream Mach number 1.90

"An investigation was conducted at Mach number 1.90 to determine pressure recovery and mass-flow characteristics of series of perforated convergent-divergent supersonic diffusers. Pressure recoveries as high as 96 percent were obtained, but at reduced mass flows through the diffuser. Theoretical considerations of effect of perforation distribution on shock stability in converging section of diffuser are presented and correlated with experimental data. A method of estimating relative importance of pressure recovery and mass flow on internal thrust coefficient basis is given and a comparison of various diffusers investigated is made" (p. 1).
Date: May 8, 1950
Creator: Hunczak, Henry R. & Kremzier, Emil J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-Spinning Tunnel Tests of a 1/20-Scale Model of the McDonnell XF3H-1 Airplane : TED No. NACA DE 343 (open access)

Free-Spinning Tunnel Tests of a 1/20-Scale Model of the McDonnell XF3H-1 Airplane : TED No. NACA DE 343

Memorandum presenting an investigation conducted in the 20-foot free-spinning tunnel with a scale model to determine the spin and recovery characteristics of the McDonnell XF3H-1 airplane. The effects of control settings and movements on the erect and inverted spin and recovery characteristics of the model were determined. Results regarding design gross weight loading, variation of loading, spin-recovery parachutes, pilot escape, landing condition, control forces, and recommended recovery technique are provided.
Date: September 8, 1950
Creator: Berman, Theodore
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Speed Investigation of a 0.16-Scale Model of the X-3 Airplane: Longitudinal Characteristics (open access)

Low-Speed Investigation of a 0.16-Scale Model of the X-3 Airplane: Longitudinal Characteristics

Report presenting a wind-tunnel investigation of the low-speed static longitudinal characteristics of a model of the X-3 airplane with the wing flaps neutral and deflected. Results regarding those characteristics with the flaps neutral, with the flaps fully deflected, in the presence of a ground plane, with the flaps partially deflected, and effect of miscellaneous changes of the model are provided.
Date: September 8, 1950
Creator: Delany, Noel K. & Hayter, Nora-Lee F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Propeller Section Aerodynamic Characteristics as Determined by Measuring the Section Surface Pressures on an NACA 10-(3)(08)-03 Propeller Under Operating Conditions (open access)

Propeller Section Aerodynamic Characteristics as Determined by Measuring the Section Surface Pressures on an NACA 10-(3)(08)-03 Propeller Under Operating Conditions

Report presenting a wind-tunnel investigation to determine propeller section aerodynamic characteristics by measuring surface pressure distribution on the airfoil sections of a rotating propeller. The pressures were measured at nine radial sections of the NACA 10-(3)(08)-03 two-blade propeller. Results regarding sectional critical Mach number, and aerodynamic coefficients are also presented.
Date: November 8, 1950
Creator: Evans, Albert J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Speed Investigation of the Effect of Several Flap and Spoiler Ailerons on the Lateral Characteristics of a 47.5 Degree Sweptback-Wing-Fuselage Combination at a Reynolds Number of 4.4. X 10(6) (open access)

Low-Speed Investigation of the Effect of Several Flap and Spoiler Ailerons on the Lateral Characteristics of a 47.5 Degree Sweptback-Wing-Fuselage Combination at a Reynolds Number of 4.4. X 10(6)

Report presenting an investigation of the low-speed lateral characteristics of a 47.5 degree sweptback-wing-fuselage combination with several flap and spoiler aileron arrangements. Results regarding aileron control characteristics, spoiler-control characteristics, and a comparison of the two are provided.
Date: December 8, 1950
Creator: Pasamanick, Jerome & Sellers, Thomas B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimated deceleration of airplane nose section jettisoned at various altitudes and airspeeds (open access)

Estimated deceleration of airplane nose section jettisoned at various altitudes and airspeeds

Memorandum presenting calculations made to determine the deceleration at any time after jettisoning of an airplane nose-section design typical of those which have been proposed as escape devices for high-speed airplanes. The decelerations were determined by two methods, one using successive approximations requiring graphical integration and the other giving reasonably close approximations by direct computation.
Date: January 8, 1951
Creator: Scher, Stanley H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal-control effectiveness and downwash characteristics at a Mach number of 1.24 of a 1/30-scale semispan model of the Bell X-5 airplane as determined by the NACA wing-flow method (open access)

Longitudinal-control effectiveness and downwash characteristics at a Mach number of 1.24 of a 1/30-scale semispan model of the Bell X-5 airplane as determined by the NACA wing-flow method

Report presenting an investigation at a Mach number of 1.24 using the NACA wing-flow method to determine the longitudinal-control effectiveness and downwash characteristics of a scale semispan model of the variable-sweep Bell X-5 airplane with the wind swept back at several different degrees. Lift, drag, and pitching moments were obtained for various angles of attack for several horizontal tail settings and with the tail off for each angle of sweep of the wing.
Date: January 8, 1951
Creator: Sawyer, Richard H.; Kennedy, Robert M. & Morris, Garland J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Factors Affecting the Starting Characteristics of Gas-Turbine Engines (open access)

Factors Affecting the Starting Characteristics of Gas-Turbine Engines

"This report summarizes the effects of fuel volatility and engine design variables on the problem of starting gas-turbine engines at sea-level and altitude conditions. The starting operation for engines with tubular combustors is considered as three steps; namely, (1) ignition of a fuel-air mixture in the combustor, (2) propagation of flame through cross-fire tubes to all combustors, and (3) acceleration of the engine from windmilling or starting speed to the operating speed range. Pertinent data from laboratory researches, single-combustor studies, and full-scale engine investigations are presented on each phase of the starting problem" (p. 1).
Date: February 8, 1951
Creator: Lewis Laboratory Fuels Panel
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Preparation, Physical Properties, and Heats of Combustion of Four Alkylsilanes (open access)

The Preparation, Physical Properties, and Heats of Combustion of Four Alkylsilanes

Memorandum presenting a group of alkylsilanes consisting of monoethylsilane, diethylsilane, and trimethylsilane prepared in 65- and 90-percent yield by reduction of the respective alkylchlorosilanes with either lithium hydride or lithium aluminum hydride. The boiling points, densities, refractive indices, and freezing points were determined and presented with a survey of literature values.
Date: March 8, 1951
Creator: Tannenbaum, Stanley & Murphy, Maurice F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sound from a two-blade propeller at supersonic tip speeds (open access)

Sound from a two-blade propeller at supersonic tip speeds

Report presenting sound measurements at static conditions for a two-blade, 47-inch-diameter propeller over a range of tip Mach numbers. For comparison, spectrums have been obtained at both subsonic and supersonic tip speeds. Results regarding the experimental results and comparison with theory are provided.
Date: May 8, 1951
Creator: Hubbard, Harvey H. & Lassiter, Leslie W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lift, drag, and pitching moment of low-aspect-ratio wings at subsonic and supersonic speeds: Plane triangular wing of aspect ratio 4 with 3-percent-thick, biconvex section (open access)

Lift, drag, and pitching moment of low-aspect-ratio wings at subsonic and supersonic speeds: Plane triangular wing of aspect ratio 4 with 3-percent-thick, biconvex section

Report presenting a wing-body combination with a plane triangular wing of aspect ratio 4 and 3-percent-thick, biconvex sections in streamwise planes at subsonic and supersonic Mach numbers. Lift, drag, and pitching moment are presented for a range of Mach and Reynolds numbers.
Date: June 8, 1951
Creator: Heitmeyer, John C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of airfoil sections on two triangular-wing-fuselage configurations at transonic speeds from tests by the NACA wing-flow method (open access)

Comparison of airfoil sections on two triangular-wing-fuselage configurations at transonic speeds from tests by the NACA wing-flow method

Report presenting tests using the NACA wing-flow method at a range of Mach numbers to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of four triangular-wing-fuselage models. Measurements of the normal force, chord force, and pitching moment for various angles of attack. Two models had wings of aspect ratio 2.31, one with an NACA 65-009 airfoil section and one with a 9-percent-thick biconvex section, and two with wings of aspect ratio 4, one with an NACA 65-006 airfoil and one with a 6-percent-thick double-wedge airfoil.
Date: August 8, 1951
Creator: Hall, Albert W. & McKay, James M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary Experimental Investigation of Flutter Characteristics of M and W Wings (open access)

Preliminary Experimental Investigation of Flutter Characteristics of M and W Wings

Report presenting the results of nine experimental flutter tests involving two flat-plate models and two rib and spar models of NACA 0012 airfoil sections in order to give a comparison of the flutter characteristics of wings with M and W type plan forms. The W plan form generally gave higher flutter speeds than the M plan forms.
Date: August 8, 1951
Creator: Herr, Robert W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Damping in Roll of Rocket-Powered Test Vehicles Having Swept, Tapered Wings of Low Aspect Ratio (open access)

Damping in Roll of Rocket-Powered Test Vehicles Having Swept, Tapered Wings of Low Aspect Ratio

"Flight tests of rocket-powered models have been conducted to determine the damping in roll of a group of swept, tapered wings designed for flight in the transonic speed region. The Mach number range of these tests was from approximately 0.7 to 1.4. The experimental damping in roll for all configurations was less than predicted by linearized theory throughout the Mach umber range of these tests. The only wing in this group that experienced an appreciable transonic lateral trim change was the one with a 7-percent-thick circular-arc airfoil section" (p. 1).
Date: October 8, 1951
Creator: Sanders, E. Claude, Jr. & Edmondson, James L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Derivation of the Equations of Motion of a Symmetrical Wing-Tip-Coupled Airplane Configuration With Rotational Freedom at the Junctures (open access)

Derivation of the Equations of Motion of a Symmetrical Wing-Tip-Coupled Airplane Configuration With Rotational Freedom at the Junctures

"The method of Lagrange multipliers is used to take account of the dynamic effects of the constraints at the wing tips when two identical airplanes are coupled to the wing tips of a "mother" airplane. The resulting equations of motion of this symmetrical configuration are derived for one, two, or three degrees of rotational freedom at each joint" (p. 1).
Date: October 8, 1951
Creator: Schy, Albert A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Free-flight measurements at Mach numbers from 0.7 to 1.6 of some effects of airfoil-thickness distribution and trailing-edge angle on aileron rolling effectiveness and drag for wings with 0 and 45 degrees sweepback (open access)

Free-flight measurements at Mach numbers from 0.7 to 1.6 of some effects of airfoil-thickness distribution and trailing-edge angle on aileron rolling effectiveness and drag for wings with 0 and 45 degrees sweepback

Report presenting the wing-aileron rolling effectiveness and drag for full-span sealed ailerons on untapered wings over a range of Mach numbers by using rocket-propelled test vehicles in free flight.
Date: October 8, 1951
Creator: Fields, E. M. & Strass, H. Kurt
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Effects of Fuselage Interference, Wing Interference, and Sweepback on the Damping in Roll of Untapered Wings as Determined by Techniques Employing Rocket-Propelled Vehicles (open access)

Some Effects of Fuselage Interference, Wing Interference, and Sweepback on the Damping in Roll of Untapered Wings as Determined by Techniques Employing Rocket-Propelled Vehicles

Report presenting an experimental investigation utilizing rocket propelled vehicles in free flight to determine some effects of fuselage interference, wing interference, and sweepback on the damping-in-roll characteristics of untapered wings with an aspect ratio of 3.7 and NACA 65A009 airfoil sections between a range of Mach numbers.
Date: October 8, 1951
Creator: Bland, William M., Jr. & Dietz, Albert E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flying qualities of a high-performance personal-owner airplane (open access)

Flying qualities of a high-performance personal-owner airplane

Report presenting an investigation to measure the flying qualities of a high-performance personal-owner airplane to investigate the possible causes of instrument flying accidents with that type of aircraft. Testing indicated that the lack of aerodynamic stall warning and rapid roll-off at the stall could contribute to stall-spin accidents with high-performance personal-owner aircraft. Results regarding the handling qualities and the control under instrument flying conditions are provided.
Date: November 8, 1951
Creator: Adams, James J. & Whitten, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altitude operational characteristics of a prototype model of the J47D (RX1-1 and RX1-3) turbojet engines with integrated electronic control (open access)

Altitude operational characteristics of a prototype model of the J47D (RX1-1 and RX1-3) turbojet engines with integrated electronic control

Report presenting an investigation of the altitude operational characteristics of a prototype model of the J47D turbojet engines, which includes an afterburner, a variable-area exhaust nozzle, and an integrated electronic control in an altitude wind tunnel. Results regarding compressor stall, compressor unstall, combustor blow-out during acceleration, stall and blow-out protection, acceleration characteristics, deceleration characteristics, and altitude starting characteristics, afterburner operational characteristics are provided.
Date: January 8, 1952
Creator: Bloomer, Harry E.; Conrad, E. William & Sobolewski, Adam E.
System: The UNT Digital Library