Performance of a fuel-injection spark-ignition engine using a hydrogenated safety fuel (open access)

Performance of a fuel-injection spark-ignition engine using a hydrogenated safety fuel

This report presents the performance of a single-cylinder test engine using a hydrogenated safety fuel. The safety fuel has a flash point of 125 degrees f. (Cleveland open-dup method), which is high enough to remove most of the fire hazard, and an octane number of 95, which permits higher compression ratios to be used than are permissible with most undoped gasolines.
Date: June 13, 1933
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Young, Alfred W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests on Combinations of a Wing With Fixed Auxiliary Airfoils Having Various Chords and Profiles (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests on Combinations of a Wing With Fixed Auxiliary Airfoils Having Various Chords and Profiles

This report presents the results of wind tunnel tests on various auxiliary airfoils having three different airfoil sections and several different chord lengths in combination with a Clark Y model wing in a sufficient number of relative positions to determine the optimum with regard to certain criterions of aerodynamic performance. The airfoil sections included a symmetrical profile, one of medium camber, and a highly cambered one. The chord sizes of the auxiliary airfoils ranged from 7.5 to 25 percent of the chord of the main wing, and the span was equal to that of the main wing.
Date: June 10, 1933
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Sanders, Robert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Strength Tests of Thin-Walled Duralumin Cylinders in Compression (open access)

Strength Tests of Thin-Walled Duralumin Cylinders in Compression

"This report is the second of a series presenting the results of strength tests of thin-walled duralumin cylinders and truncated cones of circular and elliptic section. It contains the results obtained from compression tests on 45 thin-walled duralumin cylinders of circular section with ends clamped to rigid bulkheads. In addition to the tests on duralumin cylinders, there are included the results of numerous tests on rubber, celluloid, steel, and brass cylinders obtained from various sources" (p. 585).
Date: June 10, 1933
Creator: Lundquist, Eugene E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flutter calculations in three degrees of freedom (open access)

Flutter calculations in three degrees of freedom

From Summary: "The present paper is a continuation of the general study of flutter published in NACA reports nos. 496 and 685. The paper is mainly devoted to flutter in three degrees of freedom (bending, torsion, and aileron) for which a number of selected cases have been calculated and presented in graphical form. The results are analyzed and discussed with regard to the effects of structural damping, of fractional-span ailerons, and of mass-balancing. The analysis shows that more emphasis should be put on the effect of structural damping and less on mass-balancing."
Date: June 7, 1941
Creator: Theodorsen, Theodore & Garrick, I. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical study of air forces on an oscillating or steady thin wing in a supersonic main stream (open access)

Theoretical study of air forces on an oscillating or steady thin wing in a supersonic main stream

From Summary: "A theoretical study, based on the linearized equations of motion for small disturbance, is made of the air forces on wings of general plan forms moving forward at a constant supersonic speed. The boundary problem is set up for both the harmonically oscillating and the steady conditions. Two types of boundary conditions are distinguished, which are designated "purely supersonic" and "mixed supersonic." the method is illustrated by applications to a number of examples for both the steady and the oscillating conditions."
Date: June 4, 1947
Creator: Garrick, I. E. & Rubinow, S. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Screens in Wide-Angle Diffusers (open access)

Effect of Screens in Wide-Angle Diffusers

"An experimental investigation at low airspeeds was made of the filling effect observed when a screen or similar resistance is placed across a diffuser. The filling effect is found to be real in that screens can prevent separation or restore separated flow in diffusers even of extreme divergence and to depend principally on screen location and pressure-drop coefficient of the screen. Results are given for three different diffusers of circular cross section with a variety of screen arrangements. Effects of single screens and multiple screens are shown" (p. 1).
Date: June 26, 1947
Creator: Schubauer, G. B. & Spangenberg, W. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Gaseous Explosive Reaction: The Effect of Pressure on the Rate of Propagation of the Reaction Zone and Upon the Rate of Molecular Transformation (open access)

The Gaseous Explosive Reaction: The Effect of Pressure on the Rate of Propagation of the Reaction Zone and Upon the Rate of Molecular Transformation

This study of gaseous explosive reaction has brought out a number of important fundamental characteristics of the explosive reaction indicating that the basal processes of the transformation are much simpler and corresponds more closely to the general laws and principles of ordinary transformations than is usually supposed. The report calls attention to the point that the rate of molecular transformation within the zone was found in all cases to be proportional to pressure, that the transformation within the zone is the result of binary impacts. This result is of unusual interest in the case of the reaction of heavy hydrocarbon fuels and the reaction mechanism proposed by the recent kinetic theory of chain reactions.
Date: June 14, 1930
Creator: Stevens, F. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Speed and deceleration trials of U.S.S. Los Angeles (open access)

Speed and deceleration trials of U.S.S. Los Angeles

From Summary: "The trials reported in this report were instigated by the Bureau of Aeronautics of the Navy Department for the purpose of determining accurately the speed and resistance of the U. S. S. "Los Angeles" with and without water recovery apparatus, and to clear up the apparent discrepancies between the speed attained in service and in the original trials in Germany. The trials proved very conclusively that the water recovery apparatus increases the resistance about 20 per cent, which is serious, and shows the importance of developing a type of recovery having less resistance. Between the American and the German speed trials without water recovery there remains an unexplained discrepancy of nearly 6 per cent in speed at a given rate of engine revolutions."
Date: June 12, 1928
Creator: De France, S. J. & Burgess, C. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Gaseous Explosive Reaction: The Effect of Inert Gases (open access)

The Gaseous Explosive Reaction: The Effect of Inert Gases

"Attention is called in this report to previous investigations of gaseous explosive reactions carried out under constant volume conditions, where the effect of inert gases on the thermodynamic equilibrium was determined. The advantage of constant pressure methods over those of constant volume as applied to studies of the gaseous explosive reaction is pointed out and the possibility of realizing for this purpose a constant pressure bomb mentioned" (p. 479).
Date: June 24, 1927
Creator: Stevens, F. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effects of fuel and cylinder gas densities on the characteristics of fuel sprays for oil engines (open access)

The effects of fuel and cylinder gas densities on the characteristics of fuel sprays for oil engines

"This investigation was conducted as a part of a general research on fuel-injection engines for aircraft. The purpose of the investigation was to determine the effects of fuel and cylinder gas densities with several characteristics of fuel sprays for oil engines. The start, growth, and cut-off of single fuel sprays produced by automatic injection valves were recorded on photographic film by means of special high-speed motion-picture apparatus" (p. 491).
Date: June 14, 1927
Creator: Joachim, W. F. & Beardsley, Edward G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full Scale Tests of Wood Propellers on a VE-7 Airplane in the Propeller Research Tunnel (open access)

Full Scale Tests of Wood Propellers on a VE-7 Airplane in the Propeller Research Tunnel

"The investigation described in this report was made primarily to afford a comparison between propeller tests in the new propeller research tunnel and flight tests and small model tests on propellers. Three wood propellers which had been previously tested in flight on a VE-7 airplane, and of which models had also been tested in a wind tunnel, were tested again on a VE-7 airplane in the propeller research tunnel. The results of these tests are in fair agreement with those of the flight and model tests" (p. 445).
Date: June 18, 1928
Creator: Weick, Fred E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full Scale Tests on a Thin Metal Propeller at Various Tip Speeds (open access)

Full Scale Tests on a Thin Metal Propeller at Various Tip Speeds

"This report describes an investigation made in order to determine the effect of tip speed on the characteristics of a thin-bladed metal propeller. The propeller was mounted on a VE-7 airplane with a 180-HP E-2 engine, and tested in the 20-foot propeller research tunnel of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. It was found that the effect of tip speed on the propulsive efficiency was negligible within the range of the tests, which was from 600 to 1,000 feet per second (about 0.5 to 0.9 the velocity of sound in air)" (p. 465).
Date: June 20, 1928
Creator: Weick, Fred E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Investigation of the Use of Discharge Valves and an Intake Control for Improving the Performance of N.A.C.A. Roots Type Supercharger (open access)

An Investigation of the Use of Discharge Valves and an Intake Control for Improving the Performance of N.A.C.A. Roots Type Supercharger

"This report presents the results of an analytical investigation on the practicability of using mechanically operated discharge valves in conjunction with a manually operated intake control for improving the performance of N. A. C. A. Roots type superchargers. These valves, which may be either of the oscillating or rotating type, are placed in the discharge opening of the supercharger and are so shaped and synchronized with the supercharger impellers that they do not open until the air has been compressed to the delivery pressure. The intake control limits the quantity of air compressed to engine requirements by permitting the excess air to escape from the compression chamber before compression begins" (p. 479).
Date: June 29, 1928
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Wilson, Ernest E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An experimental investigation of sting-support effects on drag and a comparison with jet effects at transonic speeds (open access)

An experimental investigation of sting-support effects on drag and a comparison with jet effects at transonic speeds

Various dummy stings were tested on the rear of a related series of afterbody shapes for Mach numbers from 0.80 to 1.10 and Reynolds numbers based on body length from 15.0 x 16 to the 6th power to 17.4 x 10 to the 6th power. A method is presented whereby approximate sting interference corrections can be made to models having afterbody shapes and sting supports similar to those of these tests if the Reynolds numbers are of the same order of magnitude and a turbulent boundary layer exists at the model base. Also presented is an analysis of jet duplication by use of a sting.
Date: June 4, 1956
Creator: Cahn, Maurice S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Method of Computing the Transient Temperature of Thick Walls From Arbitrary Variation of Adiabatic-Wall Temperature and Heat-Transfer Coefficient (open access)

A Method of Computing the Transient Temperature of Thick Walls From Arbitrary Variation of Adiabatic-Wall Temperature and Heat-Transfer Coefficient

"A method of calculating the temperature of thick walls has been developed in which the time series and the response to a unit triangle variation of surface temperature concepts are used, together with essentially standard formulas for transient temperature and heat flow into thick walls. The method can be used without knowledge of the mathematical tools of its development. The method is particularly suitable for determining the wall temperature in one-dimensional thermal problems in aeronautics where there is a continuous variation of the heat-transfer coefficient and adiabatic-wall temperature" (p. 877).
Date: June 18, 1957
Creator: Hill, P. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The similarity law for hypersonic flow and requirements for dynamic similarity of related bodies in free flight (open access)

The similarity law for hypersonic flow and requirements for dynamic similarity of related bodies in free flight

The similarity law for nonsteady, inviscid, hypersonic flow about slender three-dimensional shapes is derived. Conclusions drawn are shown to be valid for rotational flow. Requirements for dynamic similarity of related shapes in free flight are obtained. The law is examined for steady flow about related three-dimensional shapes. Results of an experimental investigation of the pressures acting on two inclined cones are found to check the law as it applies to bodies of revolution.
Date: June 5, 1951
Creator: Hamaker, Frank M.; Neice, Stanford E. & Wong, Thomas J.
System: The UNT Digital Library