Rates of fuel discharge as affected by the design of fuel-injection systems for internal-combustion engines (open access)

Rates of fuel discharge as affected by the design of fuel-injection systems for internal-combustion engines

Using the method of weighing fuel collected in a receiver during a definite interval of the injection period, rates of discharge were determined, and the effects noted, when various changes were made in a fuel-injection system. The injection system consisted primarily of a by-pass controlled fuel pump and an automatic injection valve. The variables of the system studied were the pump speed, pump-throttle setting, discharge-orifice diameter, injection-valve opening and closing pressures, and injection-tube length and diameter.
Date: May 15, 1932
Creator: Gelalles, A. G. & Marsh, E. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photomicrographic studies of fuel sprays (open access)

Photomicrographic studies of fuel sprays

A large number of photomicrographs of fuel sprays were taken for the purpose of studying the spray structure and the process of spray formation. They were taken at magnifying powers of 2.5, 3.25, and 10, using a spark discharge of very short duration for illumination. Several types and sizes of nozzles were investigated, different liquids were used, and a wide range of injection pressures was employed. The sprays were photographed as they were injected into a glass-walled chamber in which the air density was varied from 14 atmospheres to 0.0013 atmosphere.
Date: December 15, 1932
Creator: Lee, Dana W. & Spencer, Robert C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Differential and Total Thrust and Torque of Six Full-Scale Adjustable-Pitch Propellers (open access)

Measurement of the Differential and Total Thrust and Torque of Six Full-Scale Adjustable-Pitch Propellers

"Force measurements giving total thrust and torque, and propeller slip stream surveys giving differential thrust and torque were simultaneously made on each of six full-scale propellers in the 20-foot propeller-research tunnel of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. They were adjustable-pitch metal propellers 9.5 feet in diameter; three had modified Clark Y blade sections and three had modified RAF-6 blade sections. This report gives the differential thrust and torque and the variation caused by changing the propeller tip speed and the pitch setting" (p. 437).
Date: April 15, 1932
Creator: Stickle, George W.
System: The UNT Digital Library