Comparison of hecter fuel with export aviation gasoline (open access)

Comparison of hecter fuel with export aviation gasoline

Among the fuels which will operate at compression ratios up to at least 8.0 without preignition or "pinking" is hecter fuel, whence a careful determination of its performance is of importance. For the test data presented in this report the hecter fuel used was a mixture of 30 per cent benzol and 70 per cent cyclohexane, having a low freezing point, and distilling from first drop to 90 per cent at nearly a constant temperature, about 20 degrees c. below the average distillation temperature ("mean volatility") of the x gasoline (export grade). The results of these experiments show that the power developed by hecter fuel is the same as that developed by export aviation gasoline at about 1,800 r.p.m. at all altitudes. At lower speeds differences in the power developed by the fuels become evident. Comparisons at ground level were omitted to avoid any possibility of damaging the engine by operating with open throttle on gasoline at so high a compression. The fuel consumption per unit power based on weight, not volume, averaged more than 10 per cent greater with hecter than with x gasoline. The thermal efficiency of the engine when using hecter is less than when using gasoline, …
Date: January 29, 1920
Creator: Dickinson, H. C.; Gage, V. R. & Sparrow, S. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air force and moment for N-20 wing with certain cut-outs (open access)

Air force and moment for N-20 wing with certain cut-outs

From Introduction: "The airplane designer often finds it necessary, in meeting the requirements of visibility, to remove area or to otherwise locally distort the plan or section of an airplane wing. This report, prepared for the Bureau of Aeronautics January 15, 1925, contains the experimental results of tests on six 5 by 30 inch N-20 wing models, cut out or distorted in different ways, which were conducted in the 8 by 8 foot wind tunnel of the Navy Aerodynamical Laboratory in Washington in 1924. The measured and derived results are given without correction for vl/v for wall effect and for standard air density, p=0.00237 slug per cubic foot."
Date: November 29, 1926
Creator: Smith, R. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary flight tests of the N.A.C.A. Roots type aircraft engine supercharger (open access)

Preliminary flight tests of the N.A.C.A. Roots type aircraft engine supercharger

"An investigation of the suitability of the N.A.C.A. Roots type aircraft engine supercharger to flight-operating conditions, as determined the effects of the use of the supercharger upon engine operation and airplane performance, is described in this report. Attention was concentrated on the operation of the engine-supercharger unit and on the improvement of climbing ability; some information concerning high speeds at altitude was obtained. The supercharger was found to be satisfactory under flight-operating conditions. Although two failures occurred during the tests, the causes of both were minor and have been eliminated" (p. 207).
Date: December 29, 1926
Creator: Gardiner, Arthur W. & Reid, Elliott G.
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
The effect of increased carburetor pressure on engine performance at several compression ratios (open access)

The effect of increased carburetor pressure on engine performance at several compression ratios

The object of this investigation was to determine the effect of increasing the carburetor pressures from 30 to 40 inches of mercury, at compression ratios from 3.5 to 7.5, on the power, on the maximum cylinder pressures, on the fuel consumption, and on the other performance characteristics of an engine. A roots-type aircraft-engine supercharger was used to maintain the desired carburetor pressure.
Date: May 29, 1931
Creator: Schey, Oscar W. & Rollin, Vern G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Paris Aviation Salon, 1934 (open access)

Paris Aviation Salon, 1934

This document reviews the Air show held in Paris in 1934. It includes charts and pictures of the aircraft which were from all parts of Europe.
Date: November 29, 1934
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary tests in the NACA free-spinning wind tunnel (open access)

Preliminary tests in the NACA free-spinning wind tunnel

Typical models and the testing technique used in the NACA free-spinning wind tunnel are described in detail. The results of tests on two models afford a comparison between the spinning characteristics of scale models in the tunnel and of the airplanes that they represent.
Date: October 29, 1935
Creator: Zimmerman, C. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of body nose shape on the propulsive efficiency of a propeller (open access)

Effect of body nose shape on the propulsive efficiency of a propeller

Report presents the results of an investigation of the propulsive efficiency of three adjustable propellers of 10-foot diameter operated in front of four body nose shapes, varying from streamline nose that continued through the propeller plane in the form of a large spinner to a conventional open-nose radial-engine cowling. One propeller had airfoil sections close to the hub, the second had conventional round blade shanks, and the third differed from the second only in pitch distribution. The blade-angle settings ranged from 20 degrees to 55 degrees at the 0.75 radius.
Date: January 29, 1940
Creator: Stickle, George W.; Crigler, John L. & Naiman, Irven
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary investigation of the flying qualities of airplanes (open access)

Preliminary investigation of the flying qualities of airplanes

"The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics is undertaking an investigation of the flying qualities of airplanes. The work consists in the determination of the significant qualities susceptible of measurement, the development of the instruments required to make the measurements, and the accumulation of data on the flying qualities of existing airplanes, which data are to serve as a basis for quantitative specifications for the flying qualities of future designs" (p. 449).
Date: March 29, 1940
Creator: Soulé, H. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Calculated Effect of Various Hydrodynamic and Aerodynamic Factors on the Take-Off of a Large Flying Boat (open access)

The Calculated Effect of Various Hydrodynamic and Aerodynamic Factors on the Take-Off of a Large Flying Boat

Report presents the results of an investigation made to determine the influence of various factors on the take-off performance of a hypothetical large flying boat by means of take-off calculations. The factors varied in the calculations were size of hull (load coefficient), wing setting, trim, deflection of flap, wing loading, aspect ratio, and parasite drag. The take-off times and distances were calculated to the stalling speeds and the performance above these speeds was separately studied to determine piloting technique for optimum take-off.
Date: April 29, 1940
Creator: Olson, R. E. & Allison, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal characteristics and aileron effectiveness of a midwing airplane from high-speed wind tunnel tests (open access)

Longitudinal characteristics and aileron effectiveness of a midwing airplane from high-speed wind tunnel tests

Report presenting wind-tunnel tests of a 0.175-scale model of a midwing airplane in order to determine the high-speed longitudinal characteristics, to test devices for improving longitudinal control at high Mach numbers, and to determine the aileron effectiveness at high Mach numbers. Force and moment coefficients are computed from test data. Control forces, elevator angle, and aileron angle for several flight conditions are predicted.
Date: September 29, 1944
Creator: Hall, Charles F. & Mannes, Robert L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the flow of a compressible fluid by the hodograph method 2: fundamental set of particular flow solutions of the Chaplygin differential equation (open access)

On the flow of a compressible fluid by the hodograph method 2: fundamental set of particular flow solutions of the Chaplygin differential equation

From Summary: "The differential equation of Chaplygin's jet problem is utilized to give a systematic development of particular solutions of the hodograph flow equations, which extends the treatment of Chaplygin into the supersonic range and completes the set of particular solutions. The particular solutions serve to place on a reasonable basis the use of velocity correction formulas for the comparison of incompressible and compressible flows. It is shown that the geometric-mean type of velocity correction formula introduced in part I has significance as an over-all type of approximation in the subsonic range."
Date: September 29, 1944
Creator: Garrick, I. E. & Kaplan, Carl
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Flow of a Compressible Fluid by the Hodograph Method. II - Fundamental Set of Particular Flow Solutions of the Chaplygin Differential Equation (open access)

On the Flow of a Compressible Fluid by the Hodograph Method. II - Fundamental Set of Particular Flow Solutions of the Chaplygin Differential Equation

From Summary: "The differential equation of Chaplygin's jet problem is utilized to give a systematic development of particular solutions of the hodograph flow equations, which extends the treatment of Chaplygin into the supersonic range and completes the set of particular solutions. The particular solutions serve to place on a reasonable basis the use of velocity correction formulas for the comparison of incompressible and compressible flows. It is shown that the geometric-mean type of velocity correction formula introduced in part I has significance as an over-all type of approximation in the subsonic range."
Date: September 29, 1944
Creator: Garrick, I. E. & Kaplan, Carl
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extension of Useful Operating Range of Axial-Flow Compressors by Use of Adjustable Stator Blades (open access)

Extension of Useful Operating Range of Axial-Flow Compressors by Use of Adjustable Stator Blades

"A theory has been developed for resetting the blade angles of an axial-flow compressor in order to improve the performance at speeds and flows other than the design and thus extend the useful operating range of the compressor. The theory is readily applicable to the resetting of both rotor and stator blades or to the resetting of only the stator blades and is based on adjustment of the blade angles to obtain lift coefficients at which the blades will operate efficiently. Calculations were made for resetting the stator blades of the NACA eight-stage axial-flow compressor for 75 percent of design speed and a series of load coefficients ranging from 0.28 to 0.70 with rotor blades left at the design setting" (p. 425).
Date: December 29, 1944
Creator: Sinnette, John T., Jr. & Voss, William J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of Individual Aileron Hinge Moments and Aileron Control Characteristics of a P-40F Airplane (open access)

Measurement of Individual Aileron Hinge Moments and Aileron Control Characteristics of a P-40F Airplane

"Flight measurements have been made of the individual aileron hinge moments, aileron rolling effectiveness pb/2V ,and stick-force characteristics in abrupt aileron rolls with a P-40F airplane (AAF No. 41-14119) over an indicated airspeed range from 108 to 304 miles per hour. Three methods for measuring the rate of change of hinge moment with angle of attack were investigated. Presented for comparison with the flight results are data from two-dimensional wind-tunnel tests of the wing-aileron profile as measured at the center aileron hinge" (p. 1).
Date: January 29, 1945
Creator: Goranson, R. Fabian
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests of a Portion of a PV-2 Helicopter Rotor Blade (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests of a Portion of a PV-2 Helicopter Rotor Blade

From Summary: "A portion of a PV-2 helicopter rotor blade has been tested in the 6- by 6-foot test section of the Langley stability tunnel to determine if the aerodynamic characteristics were seriously affected by cross flow or fabric distortion. The outer portion of the blade was tested as a reflection plane model pivoted about the tunnel wall to obtain various angles of cross flow over the blade. Because the tunnel wall acts as a plane of symmetry, the measured aerodynamic characteristics correspond to those of an airfoil having various angles of sweepforward and sweepback. Tests were made with the vents on the lower surface open and also with the vents sealed and the internal pressure held at -20 inches of water producing an internal pressure coefficient of -1.059."
Date: March 29, 1945
Creator: Kemp, William B., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method for the calculation of external lift, moment, and pressure drag of slender open-nose bodies of revolution at supersonic speeds (open access)

A method for the calculation of external lift, moment, and pressure drag of slender open-nose bodies of revolution at supersonic speeds

An approximate method is presented for the calculation of the external lift, moment, and pressure drag of slender open-nose bodies of revolution of supersonic speeds. The lift, moment, and pressure drag of a typical ram-jet body shape are calculated at Mach numbers 1.45, 1.60, 1.75, and 3.00; and the lift and moment results are compared with available experimental data. The agreement of the calculated lift and moment data with the experimental data is excellent. The pressure-drag comparison was not presented because of the uncertainty of the amount of skin-friction drag present in the experimental results.
Date: December 29, 1945
Creator: Brown, Clinton E. & Parker, Hermon M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of the Method of Characteristics to Supersonic Rotational Flow (open access)

Application of the Method of Characteristics to Supersonic Rotational Flow

"A system for calculating the physical properties of supersonic rotational flow with axial symmetry and supersonic rotational flow in a two-dimensional field was determined by use of the characteristics method. The system was applied to the study of external and internal flow for supersonic inlets with axial symmetry. For a circular conical inlet the shock that occurred at the lip of the inlet became stronger as it approached the axis of the inlet and became a normal shock at the axis" (p. 111).
Date: April 29, 1946
Creator: Ferri, Antonio
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flutter and oscillating air-force calculations for an airfoil in two-dimensional supersonic flow (open access)

Flutter and oscillating air-force calculations for an airfoil in two-dimensional supersonic flow

A connected account is given of the Possio theory of non-stationary flow for small disturbances in a two-dimensional supersonic flow and of its application to the determination of the aerodynamic forces on an oscillating airfoil. Further application is made to the problem of wing flutter in the degrees of freedom - torsion, bending, and aileron rotations. Numerical tables for flutter calculations are provided for various values of the Mach number greater than unity. Results for bending-torsion wing flutter are shown in figures and are discussed. The static instabilities of divergence and aileron reversal are examined as is a one-degree-of-freedom case of torsional oscillatory instability.
Date: May 29, 1946
Creator: Garrick, I. E. & Rubinow, S. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank Investigation of a Powered Dynamic Model of a Large Long-Range Flying Boat (open access)

Tank Investigation of a Powered Dynamic Model of a Large Long-Range Flying Boat

"Principles for designing the optimum hull for a large long-range flying boat to meet the requirements of seaworthiness, minimum drag, and ability to take off and land at all operational gross loads were incorporated in a 1/12-size powered dynamic model of a four-engine transport flying boat having a design gross load of 165,000 pounds. These design principles included the selection of a moderate beam loading, ample forebody length, sufficient depth of step, and close adherence to the form of a streamline body. The aerodynamic and hydrodynamic characteristics of the model were investigated in Langley tank no. 1" (p. 1).
Date: November 29, 1946
Creator: Parkinson, John B.; Olson, Roland E. & Haar, Marvin I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical lift and drag of thin triangular wings at supersonic speeds (open access)

Theoretical lift and drag of thin triangular wings at supersonic speeds

"A method is derived for calculating the lift and the drag due to lift of point-forward triangular wings and a restricted series of sweptback wings at supersonic speeds. The elementary or "supersonic sources" solution of the linearized equation of motion is used to find the potential function of a line of doublets. The flow about the triangular flat plate is then obtained by a surface distribution of these doublet lines. The lift-curve slope of triangular wings is found to be a function of the ratio of the tangent of the apex angle to the tangent of the Mach angle" (p. 97).
Date: November 29, 1946
Creator: Brown, Clinton E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Buffeting of External Fuel Tanks at High Speeds on a Gruman F7F-3 Airplane (open access)

Buffeting of External Fuel Tanks at High Speeds on a Gruman F7F-3 Airplane

Attempts were made to alleviate the buffeting of external fuel tanks mounted under the wings of a twin-engine Navy fighter airplane. The Mach number at which buffeting began was increased from 0,529 to 0.640 by streamlining the sway braces and by increasing the lateral rigidity of the sway brace system. Further increase of the Mach number, at which buffeting began to 0.725, was obtained by moving the external fuel tank to a position under the fuselage.
Date: January 29, 1947
Creator: Turner, Howard L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Tests to Determine the Effect of Length of a Conical Windshield on the Drag of a Bluff Body at Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Flight Tests to Determine the Effect of Length of a Conical Windshield on the Drag of a Bluff Body at Supersonic Speeds

Flight tests were conducted to determine the effect of length of a conical windshield on the drag of a bluff body moving at supersonic speeds. A comparison is made between results obtained and results of previous drag tests of body-windshield combinations.The effect of increasing the length of the windshield is discussed.
Date: January 29, 1947
Creator: Alexander, Sidney R. & Katz, Ellis
System: The UNT Digital Library
The High-Speed Longitudinal Stability and Control of the Bell P-39N-1 Airplane as Calculated from Propeller-Off Tests of a 0.35-Scale Model (open access)

The High-Speed Longitudinal Stability and Control of the Bell P-39N-1 Airplane as Calculated from Propeller-Off Tests of a 0.35-Scale Model

"This report presents the result of tests of a 0.35-scale model of the Bell P-39N-l airplane. Included are the longitudinal-stability and - control characteristics of the airplane as indicated by tests of the model equipped with each of two different sets of elevators. The results indicate good longitudinal stability and control throughout the speed range encounterable in flight" (p. 1).
Date: January 29, 1947
Creator: Robinson, Robert C. & Perone, Angelo
System: The UNT Digital Library