Analysis of a Strut With a Single Elastic Support in the Span, With Applications to the Design of Airplane Jury-Strut Systems (open access)

Analysis of a Strut With a Single Elastic Support in the Span, With Applications to the Design of Airplane Jury-Strut Systems

Report presenting an analysis of a wing brace with a small auxiliary strut, which is attached to the wing spar at the upper end. The design is quite effective but has some difficult analysis problems. The report is broken into two parts; one is a theoretical investigation and one is an experimental investigation.
Date: May 1935
Creator: Schwartz, A. Murray & Bogert, Reid
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Moments of inertia of several airplanes (open access)

Moments of inertia of several airplanes

This paper, which is the first of a series presenting the results of such measurements, gives the momental ellipsoids of ten army and naval biplanes and one commercial monoplane. The data were obtained by the use of a pendulum method, previously described. The moments of inertia are expressed in coefficient as well as in dimensional form, so that those for airplanes of widely different weights and dimensions can be compared.
Date: May 1931
Creator: Miller, Marvel P. & Soulé, Hartley A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of High Air Velocities on the Distribution and Penetration of a Fuel Spray (open access)

Effect of High Air Velocities on the Distribution and Penetration of a Fuel Spray

"By means of the NACA Spray Photography Equipment high speed moving pictures were taken of the formation and development of fuel sprays from an automatic injection valve. The sprays were injected normal to and counter to air at velocities from 0 to 800 feet per second. The air was at atmosphere temperature and pressure. The results show that high air velocities are an effective means of mixing the fuel spray with the air during injection" (p. 1).
Date: May 1931
Creator: Rothrock, A. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An integrating manometer for use in wind tunnel pressure distribution measurements (open access)

An integrating manometer for use in wind tunnel pressure distribution measurements

A multiple manometer designed to integrate automatically the normal force over an airfoil section is described and its mathematical theory explained. The development of this instrument was conducted at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory.
Date: May 1931
Creator: Noyes, Richard W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Weights of 17ST and Steel Tubular Structural Members Used in Aircraft Construction (open access)

Comparison of Weights of 17ST and Steel Tubular Structural Members Used in Aircraft Construction

Although the strong aluminum alloys have proved themselves to be very efficient in aircraft construction there is a growing competition from the high-strength steels for certain parts, especially for tubular members. This tendency is being reflected in research work carried on at the Bureau of Standards. This study will be based largely on data given in Technical Note No. 307 of the NACA.
Date: May 1931
Creator: Hartmann, E. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The pressure distribution over a semicircular wing tip on an airplane in flight (open access)

The pressure distribution over a semicircular wing tip on an airplane in flight

This note presents the results of flight pressure distribution tests on the right upper wing panel of a Douglas M-3 airplane equipped with a semicircular wing tip. The results are given in tables and curves in such form that the load distribution for any force coefficient within the usual range encountered in flight may easily be determined.
Date: May 1931
Creator: Rhode, Richard V. & Lundquist, Eugene E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Refrigerated wind tunnel tests on surface coatings for preventing ice formation (open access)

Refrigerated wind tunnel tests on surface coatings for preventing ice formation

"This investigation was conducted to determine the effectiveness of various surface coatings as a means for preventing ice formations on aircraft in flight. The substances used as coatings for these tests are divided into two groups: compounds soluble in water, and those which are insoluble in water. It was found that certain soluble compounds were apparently effective in preventing the formation of ice on an airfoil model, while all insoluble compounds which were tested were found to be ineffective" (p. 1).
Date: May 1930
Creator: Knight, Montgomery & Clay, William C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full Scale Drag Tests on Various Parts of Fairchild (FC-2W2) Cabin Monoplane (open access)

Full Scale Drag Tests on Various Parts of Fairchild (FC-2W2) Cabin Monoplane

"The drag due to the various parts of a Fairchild (FC-2W2) cabin monoplane was measured at air speeds varying from 50 to 100 m.p.h., in the Twenty-Foot Propeller Research Tunnel of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. It was found that the largest drag was due to the radial air-cooled engine. The measured drag due to the landing gear was also large, being about 4/5 of that due to the engine" (p. 1).
Date: May 1930
Creator: Herrnstein, William H., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some effects of air and fuel oil temperatures on spray penetration and dispersion (open access)

Some effects of air and fuel oil temperatures on spray penetration and dispersion

Presented here are experimental results obtained from a brief investigation of the appearance, penetration, and dispersion of oil sprays injected into a chamber of highly heated air at atmospheric pressure. The development of single sprays injected into a chamber containing air at room temperature and at high temperature was recorded by spray photography equipment. A comparison of spray records showed that with the air at the higher temperature, the spray assumed the appearance of thin, transparent cloud, the greatest part of which rapidly disappeared from view. With the chamber air at room temperature, a compact spray with an opaque core was obtained. Measurements of the records showed a decrease in penetration and an increase in the dispersion of the spray injected into the heated air. No ignition of the fuel injected was observed or recorded until the spray particles came in contact with the much hotter walls of the chamber about 0.3 second after the start of injection.
Date: May 1930
Creator: Gelalles, A. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests of a Hall High-Life Wing (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests of a Hall High-Life Wing

"Wind-tunnel tests have been made to find the lift, drag, and center-of-pressure characteristics of a Hall high-lift wing model. The Hall wing is essentially a split-flap airfoil with an internal air passage. Air enters the passage through an opening in the lower surface somewhat back of and parallel to the leading edge, and flows out through an opening made by deflecting the rear portion of the under surface downward as a flap. For ordinary flight conditions the front opening and the rear flap can be closed, providing in effect a conventional airfoil (the Clark Y in this case)" (p. 1).
Date: May 1932
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Sanders, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of spark-timing regularity on the knock of engine performance (open access)

Effect of spark-timing regularity on the knock of engine performance

Tests on a high-speed single-cylinder engine are described. The regularity of the spark timing was varied by driving the timer from different engine shafts. A simple and reasonably accurate method of determining the spark timing is described. The results show that irregular spark timing may cause large errors in tests of the knocking properties of fuels. For the engine tested, it was found that a change of one crankshaft degree in spark restart was equivalent to an 0.85 inch Hg change in allowable inlet pressure.
Date: May 1938
Creator: Biermann, Arnold E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat transfer from cylinders having closely spaced fins (open access)

Heat transfer from cylinders having closely spaced fins

The heat-transfer coefficients have been determined for five steel cylinders having fins 1.22 inches wide and the spacing between the fins ranging from 0.022 to 0.131 inch. The cylinders were tested with and without baffles in a wind tunnel; they were also tested enclosed in jackets with the cooling air supplied by a blower. A maximum heat transfer was reached at a fin space of about 0.45 inch for the cylinders tested with each of the three methods of cooling investigated. The rise in temperature of the air passing between the fins and the change in flow pattern were found to be important factors limiting the heat transfer that may be obtained by decreasing the fin space. The use of baffles for directing the air around the cylinders with closely spaced fins proved very effective in increasing the over-all heat-transfer coefficient, provided that the spacing was not appreciably less than that for maximum heat transfer.
Date: May 1937
Creator: Biermann, Arnold E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full-scale drag tests of landing lamps (open access)

Full-scale drag tests of landing lamps

"Drag tests were conducted in the N.A.C.A. full-scale wind tunnel on full-scale models of two Army Air Corps type A-6 landing lamps mounted on an 8 by 48 foot airfoil. Drag measurements were made with the lamps in the leading edge and attached to the lower surface at the 5 and 10 percent chord positions. The drag of the lamps when faired into the airfoil was also measured. The results show that at 100 miles per hour and at the angle of minimum drag of the airfoil the unaired lamps in the leading edge produced an increase in drag of 5.5 pounds and that the unaired lamps on the lower surface at either position increased the airfoil drag 22.5 pounds" (p. 1).
Date: May 1934
Creator: Dearborn, C. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Measurements of Air Loads on Split Flaps (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Measurements of Air Loads on Split Flaps

Note presenting tests in a wind tunnel to determine the control forces and air loads acting on split flaps. Clark Y wing models were used with two different sizes of full-span split flaps, one with a medium chord and one with a narrow chord. The results indicated that at angles of attack and flap deflections for maximum lift, the lift loads on the split flaps were only 5 percent and 9 percent of the total lift for the narrow and medium-chord flaps respectively.
Date: May 1934
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The increase in frictional resistance caused by various types of rivet heads as determined by tests of planing surfaces (open access)

The increase in frictional resistance caused by various types of rivet heads as determined by tests of planing surfaces

"The increase in the frictional resistance of a surface caused by the presence of rivet heads was determined by towing four planing surfaces of the same dimensions. One surface was smooth and represented a surface without rivet heads or one with perfectly flush countersunk rivets. The other three surfaces were each fitted with the same number of full-size rivet heads but of a different type arranged in the same pattern on each surface" (p. 1).
Date: May 1938
Creator: Truscott, Starr & Parkinson, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of air-passage length on the optimum fin spacing for maximum cooling (open access)

The effect of air-passage length on the optimum fin spacing for maximum cooling

The effect on cooling of baffle length with optimum cylinder finning is discussed. Results from tests of several streamlined cylinders are given. It is shown that by employing several baffles the cooling can be increased several times.
Date: May 1938
Creator: Brevoort, Maurice J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests of a Clark Y Wing Having Split Flaps With Gaps (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests of a Clark Y Wing Having Split Flaps With Gaps

"Tests were made of the Clark Y wing having split flaps with a gap between the flap and the lower surface of the wing. Lift, drag, and pitching moments were measured for the wing with three different sizes of flap. It was found that any gap between the flap and the wing reduced the lift, the drag, and the pitching moments, but that the center-of-pressure movement and the ratio of lift to drag were little affected" (p. 1).
Date: May 1938
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A simplified method for the calculation of airfoil pressure distribution (open access)

A simplified method for the calculation of airfoil pressure distribution

From Summary: "A method is presented for the rapid calculation of the pressure distribution over an airfoil section when the normal-force distribution and the pressure distribution over the "base profile" (i.e., the profile of the same airfoil were the camber line straight and the resulting airfoil at zero angle of attack) are known. This note is intended as a supplement to N.A.C.A. Report Nos. 631 and 634 wherein methods are presented for the calculation of the normal-force distribution over plain and flapped airfoils, respectively, but not of the pressures on the individual surfaces. Base-profile pressure-coefficient distributions for the usual N.A.C.A. family of airfoils, which are also suitable for several other commonly employed airfoils, are included in tabular form. With these tabulated base-profile pressures and the computed normal-force distributions, pressure distributions adequate for most engineering purposes can be obtained."
Date: May 1939
Creator: Allen, H. Julian
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A semi-graphical method for analyzing strains measured on three or four gage lines intersecting at 45 degrees (open access)

A semi-graphical method for analyzing strains measured on three or four gage lines intersecting at 45 degrees

Report presenting a method for analyzing strains measured on three or four gage lines intersecting at 45 degrees, which helps determine the state of stress at a point on a plane. An equation for adjustment factor and a master curve is provided, which can be memorized and easily used in the future.
Date: May 1939
Creator: Hill, H. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discharge characteristics of a double injection-valve single-pump injection system (open access)

Discharge characteristics of a double injection-valve single-pump injection system

The discharge characteristics of two similar injection valves operated by a single-cylinder fuel-injection pump were determined with an apparatus that measured the quantity of fuel discharged from each valve during every 0.5 degrees of pump rotation. It was found that similar discharges took place from the two valves at all pump speeds when the valve-opening pressures, the nozzle-orifice diameters, and the injection-tube lengths were the same for both valves. Under these conditions, the effects of changing the pump speed, the pump throttle setting, or the nozzle orifice diameter were very similar to those occurring with a single-injection valve. By a proper selection of discharge-orifice areas and valve-opening pressures it was possible to obtain a great many combinations of discharge quantities, discharge rates, and injection timings for the two valves. A series of tests using injection tubes of unequal lengths for the two valves showed that under these conditions the injection timing and the fuel quantity discharged from each valve varies widely and erratically with changes in the pump speed.
Date: May 1937
Creator: Lee, Dana W. & Marsh, E. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The lateral instability of deep rectangular beams (open access)

The lateral instability of deep rectangular beams

"Experimental and analytical studies were made of solid and hollow deep rectangular beams to study their lateral instability under various conditions of loading and restraint. The tests were made on bars and tubes of 17ST aluminum alloy. Failure by lateral buckling occurred only in tests on the solid beams. It was found that, within the elastic range, the test results were in agreement with the classical theory for the lateral buckling of deep beams as given by Prandtl, Mitchell, and Timoshenko" (p. 1).
Date: May 1937
Creator: Dumont, C. & Hill, H. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Ground Effect on Wings With Flaps (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Ground Effect on Wings With Flaps

From Summary: "An investigation was conducted in the N.A.C.A. 7- by 10-foot wind tunnel to determine the effect of ground proximity on the aerodynamic characteristics of wings equipped with high-lift devices. A rectangular and a tapered wing were tested without flaps, with a split flap, and with a slotted flap. The ground was represented by a flat plate, completely spanning the tunnel and extending a considerable distance ahead and back of the model. The position of the plate was varied from one-half to three chord lengths below the wing. The results are presented in the form of curves of absolute coefficients, showing the effect of the ground on each wing arrangement."
Date: May 1939
Creator: Recant, Isidore G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Experimental Investigation of the Normal Acceleration of an Airplane Model in a Gust (open access)

An Experimental Investigation of the Normal Acceleration of an Airplane Model in a Gust

Note presenting an investigation in the gust tunnel to determine the influence of airplane wing loading, forward velocity, wing plan form, and the fuselage on the reaction of the airplane to a known gust. Tests were made for four values of gust velocity and for two gust gradients, specifically the sharp-edge gust and a gust rising linearly to full strength in a distance of several chord lengths.
Date: May 1939
Creator: Donely, Philip
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Notes on the Numerical Solution of Shear-Lag and Mathematically Related Problemsq (open access)

Some Notes on the Numerical Solution of Shear-Lag and Mathematically Related Problemsq

"The analysis of box beams with shear deformation of the flanges can be reduced to the solution of a differential equation. The same equation is met in other problems of stress analysis. No analytical solutions of this equation can be given for practical cases, and numerical methods of evaluation must be used. Available methods are briefly discussed. Two numerical examples show the application of the step-by-step method of integration to shear-lag problems" (p. 1).
Date: May 1939
Creator: Kuhn, Paul
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library