N.A.C.A. Stall-Warning Device (open access)

N.A.C.A. Stall-Warning Device

With some airplanes the approach to the stall is accompanied by changes in the behavior, such as tail buffeting or changes in the control characteristics of the airplane so that the pilot obtains a warning of the impending stall. Vith other airplanes it is possible to approach the stall without any perceptible warning other than the reading of the air-speed meter, in which case the danger of inadvertent stalling is considerably greater. Although it is not within the scope of this paper to discuss stalling characteristics, it is desired to point out that in general the danger of inadvertent stalling is greatest with those airplanes that behave worse when the stalling occurs; that is, with airplanes in which the stall starts at the wing tips. A warning of the impending stall is desirable in any case, but is particularly desirable with airplanes of the latter type.
Date: February 1938
Creator: Thompson, F. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 1 - Rivets and Spot Welds (open access)

The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 1 - Rivets and Spot Welds

"Tests have been conducted in the NACA 8-foot high-speed wind tunnel to determine the effect of exposed rivet heads and spot welds on wing drag. Most of the tests were made with an airfoil of 5-foot chord. The air speed was varied from 80 to 500 miles per hour and the lift coefficient from 0 to 0.30" (p. 1).
Date: February 1938
Creator: Hood, Manley J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 4 - Manufacturing Irregularities (open access)

The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 4 - Manufacturing Irregularities

"Tests were made in the NACA 8-foot high speed wind tunnel of a metal-covered, riveted, 'service' wing of average workmanship to determine the aerodynamic effects of the manufacturing irregularities incident to shop fabrication. The wing was of 5-foot chord and of NACA 23012 section and was tested in the low-lift range at speeds from 90 to 450 miles per hour corresponding to Reynolds numbers from 4,000,000 to 18,000,000. At a cruising condition the drag of the service wing was 46% higher than the drag of a smooth airfoil, whereas the drag of an accurately constructed airfoil having the same arrangement of 3/32-inch brazier-head rivets and lap joints showed a 29% increase" (p. 1).
Date: February 1938
Creator: Robinson, Russell G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 2 - Lap Joints (open access)

The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 2 - Lap Joints

Tests have been made in the NACA 8-foot high-speed wind tunnel of the drag caused by four types of lap joint. The tests were made on an airfoil of NACA 23012 section and 5-foot chord and covered in a range of speeds from 80 to 500 miles per hour and lift coefficients from 0 to 0.30. The increases in profile drag caused by representative arrangements of laps varied from 4 to 9%. When there were protruding rivet heads on the surface, the addition of laps increased the drag only slightly. Laps on the forward part of a wing increased the drag considerably more than those farther back.
Date: February 1938
Creator: Hood, Manley J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 3 - Roughness (open access)

The Effect of Surface Irregularities on Wing Drag 3 - Roughness

"Tests have been made in the N.A.C.A. 8-foot high-speed wind tunnel of the drag caused by roughness on the surface of an airfoil of N.A.C.A. 23012 section and 5-foot chord. The tests were made at speeds from 80 to 500 miles per hour at lift coefficients from 0 to 0.30. For conditions corresponding to high-speed flight, the increase in the drag was 30 percent of the profile drag of the smooth airfoil for the roughness produced by spray painting and 63 percent for the roughness produced. by 0.0037-inch carborundum grains" (p. 1).
Date: February 1938
Creator: Hood, Manley J.
System: The UNT Digital Library