Use of Internal Coolant as a Means of Permitting Increase in Engine Take-Off Power (open access)

Use of Internal Coolant as a Means of Permitting Increase in Engine Take-Off Power

Engine tests, together with estimates made at Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory, indicate that a 25-percent increase in take-off power can be obtained with present-day aircraft engines without increasing either the knock limit of the fuel or the external cooling requirements of the engine. This increase in power with present fuels and present external cooling is made possible through the use of an internal coolant inducted through the inlet manifold. Estimates on aircraft indicate that this 25-percent increase in power will permit an approximate usable increase of 8.5 percent in the take-off load of existing military airplanes. This increase in load is equivalent to an increase in the weight of gasoline normally carried of between 30 and 65 percent.
Date: January 1944
Creator: Rothrock, Addison M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Inlet-Air Temperature and Cylinder Displacement on Charge Temperature of Internal Combustion Engines (open access)

Effect of Inlet-Air Temperature and Cylinder Displacement on Charge Temperature of Internal Combustion Engines

Report discussing the effect of inlet-air temperature and cylinder displacement on the charge temperature of an internal-combustion engine at the end of the induction stroke. The experiment to test various types of cylinders and their results on the air temperature and pressure is described.
Date: January 1944
Creator: Sanders, Newell D. & Bolz, Ray E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
XC-35 Gust Research Project Characteristics of Vertical Drafts and Associated Vertical Gust Velocities Within Convective Type Clouds (open access)

XC-35 Gust Research Project Characteristics of Vertical Drafts and Associated Vertical Gust Velocities Within Convective Type Clouds

Report discusses the results of measurements made via an XC-35 airplane to determine the relation between the velocities of vertical drafts and associated gusts within convective-type clouds. Information about vertical-draft velocity and maximum vertical true gust velocity is included.
Date: January 1945
Creator: Moskovitz, A. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Normal Pressure on the Critical Shear Stress of Curved Sheet (open access)

Effect of Normal Pressure on the Critical Shear Stress of Curved Sheet

"In order to determine the critical stresses caused by an outward acting pressure on the upper surface of a wing due to the difference in internal and external pressures, torsional tests were made on two curved-sheet specimens subjected to an outward acting normal pressure. Results show that an outward acting normal pressure appreciable raises the critical shear stress for an unstiffened curved sheet; the absolute increase in critical shear stress is slightly greater for a 30 in. rib spacing than for a 10 in. rib spacing" (p. 1).
Date: January 1943
Creator: Rafel, Norman
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrodynamic-stability tests of a model of a flying boat and of a planing surface having a small downward projection (hook) on the planing bottom near the step (open access)

Hydrodynamic-stability tests of a model of a flying boat and of a planing surface having a small downward projection (hook) on the planing bottom near the step

Report presenting stability testing of two dynamic models in tank no. 1 in order to investigate the effects of adding a small projection, or hook, on the planing bottom of the forebody near the step of a seaplane. Tests with two different projections had a rather large effect on all of the trim limits and the landing stability.
Date: January 1943
Creator: Benson, James M.
System: The UNT Digital Library