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Aircraft compass characteristics (open access)

Aircraft compass characteristics

From Summary: "A description of the test methods used at the National Bureau of Standards for determining the characteristics of aircraft compasses is given. The methods described are particularly applicable to compasses in which mineral oil is used as the damping liquid. Data on the viscosity and density of certain mineral oils used in United States Navy aircraft compasses are presented. Results of flight tests are presented."
Date: December 14, 1935
Creator: Peterson, John B. & Smith, Clyde W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drag of Prestone and Oil Radiators on the YO-31A Airplane (open access)

Drag of Prestone and Oil Radiators on the YO-31A Airplane

"At the request of the Army Air Corps tests were conducted on a mock-up of the YO-31A airplane to determine the drag of the prestone and oil radiators. The drag of the airplane was determined with both radiators exposed on the lower surface of the fuselage; with each radiator exposed; and with no radiators. The results show that at 120 m.p.h the oil radiator accounted for 2.8 percent of the drag of the complete airplane; the prestone radiator 8.3 percent; and both radiators together, 11.8 percent" (p. 1).
Date: December 1935
Creator: DeFrance, S. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight tests of a balanced split flap with particular reference to rapid operation (open access)

Flight tests of a balanced split flap with particular reference to rapid operation

The flight path of a small parasol monoplane equipped with a special type of balanced split flap was determined for a series of glides during which the time taken to deflect or retract the flap was varied from 1 to 15 seconds in order to study the effect of the time taken to complete a flap movement on the motion of an airplane between the start of a flap movement and the attainment of steady flight with the new flap setting. For flap movements accompanied by a change of lift characteristics, and consequently of velocity, there is an appreciable delay in obtaining a desired change in glide angle even though the flap is operated instantaneously. Immediate control of the glide path is obtained only when the speed is maintained during the flap movement. When the speed is changed, the deviation from the desired path during the transition increases in proportion to the rapidity with which the flap is moved so that, with a high-lift flap, abrupt retraction at speeds less than the minimum speed with the flap retracted may be dangerous if practiced close to the ground.
Date: December 1935
Creator: Soulé, H. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary Report on the Disposal of Oil-Field Brines in the Ritz-Canton Oil Field, McPherson County, Kansas (open access)

Preliminary Report on the Disposal of Oil-Field Brines in the Ritz-Canton Oil Field, McPherson County, Kansas

Report issued by the U.S. Bureau of Mines on the issues of disposal of crude oil and natural gas brine. Disposal methods are studied and presented. This report includes tables, maps, and illustrations.
Date: December 1935
Creator: Wilhelm, C. J. & Schmidt, Ludwig
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests of a Wing-Nacelle-Propeller Combination at Several Pitch Settings Up to 42 Degrees (open access)

Tests of a Wing-Nacelle-Propeller Combination at Several Pitch Settings Up to 42 Degrees

This report presents the results of tests of a 4-foot model of Navy propeller No. 4412 in conjunction with an NACA cowled nacelle mounted ahead of a thick wing in the 20-foot propeller-research tunnel. A range of propeller pitches from 17 degrees to 42 degrees at 0.75r was covered, and for this propeller the efficiency reached a maximum at a pitch setting of 27 degrees; at high pitches the efficiencies were slightly lower. The corrected propulsive efficiency is shown to be independent of the angle of attack for the high-speed and the climbing ranges of flight.
Date: November 12, 1935
Creator: Windler, Ray
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air flow around finned cylinders (open access)

Air flow around finned cylinders

Report presents the results of a study made to determine the air-flow characteristics around finned cylinders. Air-flow distribution is given for a smooth cylinder, for a finned cylinder having several fin spacings and fin widths, and for a cylinder with several types of baffle with various entrance and exit shapes. The results of these tests show: that flow characteristics around a cylinder are not so critical to changes in fin width as they are to fin spacing; that the entrance of the baffle has a marked influence on its efficiency; that properly designed baffles increase the air flow over the rear of the cylinder; and that these tests check those of heat-transfer tests in the choice of the best baffle.
Date: November 7, 1935
Creator: Brevoort, M. J. & Rollin, Vern G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bureau of Mines Multiple-Diaphragm Recording Subsurface-Pressure Gage (open access)

Bureau of Mines Multiple-Diaphragm Recording Subsurface-Pressure Gage

Report issued by the U.S. Bureau of Mines on the measuring of temperature and pressure in oil and gas wells. Descriptions of the instrumentation developed and used for these measurements are presented. This report includes tables, graphs, and illustrations.
Date: November 1935
Creator: Berwald, W. B.; Buss, H. A. & Reistle, C. E., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparative Tests of Pitot-Static Tubes (open access)

Comparative Tests of Pitot-Static Tubes

"Comparative tests were made on seven conventional Pitot-static tubes to determine their static, dynamic, and resultant errors. The effect of varying the dynamic opening, static opening, wall thickness, and inner-tube diameter was investigated. Pressure-distribution measurements showing stem and tip effects were also made. A tentative design for a standard Pitot-static tube for use in measuring air velocity is submitted" (p. 1).
Date: November 1935
Creator: Merriam, Kenneth G. & Spaulding, Ellis R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of the N.A.C.A. Slot-Lip Aileron (open access)

Development of the N.A.C.A. Slot-Lip Aileron

"An investigation of the undesirable delayed action, or lag, of the spoiler-type lateral control device led to the development of the NACA slot-lip aileron. The tests were made in the 7- by 10-foot wind tunnel with a 4- by 8-foot wing hinged at the tunnel jet boundary and restrained in roll by elastic cords. Time histories were taken of the motion of the control device under test and of the resulting wing motion" (p. 1).
Date: November 1935
Creator: Weick, Fred E. & Shortal, Joseph A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Glider Development in Germany: A Technical Survey of Progress in Design in Germany Since 1922 (open access)

Glider Development in Germany: A Technical Survey of Progress in Design in Germany Since 1922

This report is a recounting of glider development beginning with the "Vampyr" on up to the present day. The primary purpose is to determine what the fundamental features of the glider are and what the course of its development has been during the thirteen years of activity in motorless flight.
Date: November 1935
Creator: Shenstone, B. S. & Scott-Hall, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reduction of Lift of a Wing Due to Its Drag (open access)

Reduction of Lift of a Wing Due to Its Drag

This analysis computes for a predetermined airfoil and given Reynolds Number the course of the "displacement thickness," i.e., the course of the layer by which the streamlines of the potential flow are pushed away from the wing through the frictional layer. The result is, to a certain extent, a new wing contour.
Date: November 1935
Creator: Stüper, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank tests of a model of a flying-boat hull having a longitudinally concave planing bottom (open access)

Tank tests of a model of a flying-boat hull having a longitudinally concave planing bottom

"The NACA model 11-B, which has a longitudinally concave planing bottom forward of the step, was tested over a wide range of loading. The results of the tests are presented as curves of resistance and trimming moment plotted against speed for various trim angles and as curves of resistance coefficient at best trim angle, and trimming-moment coefficient. The characteristics of the form at the optimum trim are compared with those of NACA model 11-C which has the same form with the exception of a planing bottom longitudinally straight near the step" (p. 1).
Date: November 1935
Creator: Parkinson, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Weldability of High-Tensile Steels From Experience in Airplane Construction, With Special Reference to Welding Crack Susceptibility (open access)

Weldability of High-Tensile Steels From Experience in Airplane Construction, With Special Reference to Welding Crack Susceptibility

"The concept of welding crack tendency is explained and illustrated with practical examples. All pertinent causes are enumerated, and experimental measures are given through which the secondary effects can be removed and the principal causes analyzed: 1) welding stresses; and 2) material defects. The variations in length and stresses incident to welding a small bar as free weld, with restrained elongation and restrained elongation and contraction, are explored in three fundamental experiments" (p. 1).
Date: November 1935
Creator: Müller, J.
Object Type: Report
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.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Ordinary and Split Flaps on Airfoils of Different Profile (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Ordinary and Split Flaps on Airfoils of Different Profile

Report presents the results of wind tunnel tests of the Clark Y, the NACA 23012 and the NACA 23021 airfoils equipped with full-span ordinary flaps and with full-span simple split flaps. The principal object of the tests was to determine the characteristics of the airfoils with ordinary flaps and in addition, to determine the relative merits of the various airfoils when equipped with either ordinary flaps or with simple split flaps. The Clark Y airfoil was tested with 3 widths of ordinary flap, 10, 20, and 30 percent of the airfoil chord.
Date: October 25, 1935
Creator: Wenzinger, Carl J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Application of the Von Kármán-Millikan Laminar Boundary-Layer Theory and Comparison With Experiment (open access)

An Application of the Von Kármán-Millikan Laminar Boundary-Layer Theory and Comparison With Experiment

Note presenting the von Kármán-Millikan theory of laminar boundary layers as applied to the laminar boundary layer about an elliptical cylinder on which boundary-layer and pressure-distribution measurements. Good agreement is obtained between calculated and experimental results, meaning that the method may be generally applied to the laminar boundary layer about any body provided that an experimentally determined pressure distribution is available.
Date: October 1935
Creator: von Doenhoff, Albert E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Compressibility Burble (open access)

The Compressibility Burble

"Simultaneous air-flow photographs and pressure-distribution measurements have been made of the NACA 4412 airfoil at high speeds in order to determine the physical nature of the compressibility bubble. The flow photographs were obtained by the Schlieren method and the pressures were simultaneously measured for 54 stations on the 5-inch-chord wing by means of a multiple-tube photographic manometer. Pressure-measurement results and typical Schlieren photographs are presented" (p. 1).
Date: October 1935
Creator: Stack, John
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method for the determination of the spanwise lift distribution (open access)

Method for the determination of the spanwise lift distribution

The method for determination of the spanwise lift distribution is based on the Fourier series for the representation of the lift distribution. The lift distribution, as well as the angle of attack, is split up in four elementary distributions. The insertion of the angle-of-attack distribution in the Fourier series for the lift distribution gives a compound third series which is of particular advantage for the determination of the lift distribution. The method is illustrated in an example and supplemented by a graphical method. Lastly, the results of several comparative calculations with other methods are reported.
Date: October 1935
Creator: Lippisch, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests of Spheres With Reference to Reynolds Number, Turbulence, and Surface Roughness (open access)

Tests of Spheres With Reference to Reynolds Number, Turbulence, and Surface Roughness

"The behavior of the Reynolds Number of the sphere is explained (in known manner) with the aid of the boundary-layer theory. Rear spindles may falsify, under certain conditions, the supercritical sphere drag, while suspension wires in the space behind the sphere leave no traceable influence. The critical Reynolds Number of the sphere was arrived at by an unconventional method; that is, by determining the critical wind speed at which the static pressure at the back of the sphere is the same as that of the undisturbed flow. The method makes it possible to interpret the critical Reynolds Number with only one test station" (p. 1).
Date: October 1935
Creator: Hoerner, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Effects of Argon and Helium Upon Explosions of Carbon Monoxide and Oxygen (open access)

Some Effects of Argon and Helium Upon Explosions of Carbon Monoxide and Oxygen

Report presents the results of an investigation conducted to study the effects of the inert gases, argon and helium, upon flame speed and expansion ratio in exploding mixtures of carbon monoxide, oxygen and water. For the particular gas mixtures investigated the results show that: (1) With the possible exception of helium in small amounts the addition of inert gas always produces decreased flame speed and expansion ratio; (2) like volumes of argon and helium have very different effects upon flame speed but practically the same effect upon expansion ratio; and (3) the difference in the effect of these two gases upon speed is independent of the ratio of carbon monoxide to oxygen. A discussion of some possible modes by which inert gases may produce the observed effects is included.
Date: September 25, 1935
Creator: Fiock, Ernst F. & Roeder, Carl H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A deflection formula for single-span beams of constant section subjected to combined axial and transverse loads (open access)

A deflection formula for single-span beams of constant section subjected to combined axial and transverse loads

In this paper there is presented a deflection formula for single-span beams of constant section subjected to combined axial and transverse loads of the types commonly encountered in airplane design. The form of the equation is obtainable by dimensional analysis. Tables and curves of the non dimensional coefficients are appended to facilitate the use of the formula. The equation is applied to the determination of the spring constant of a beam. Tables and curves are presented to show the variation of the spring constant with changes in the axial load and position along the beam.
Date: September 1935
Creator: Burke, Walter F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Discussion of the Several Types of Two-Stroke-Cycle Engines (open access)

A Discussion of the Several Types of Two-Stroke-Cycle Engines

This report discusses different types of two-stroke engines as well as the three most important design factors: volume of scavenge and charge delivery, scavenging process (scavenging result), and result of charge. Some of the types of engines discussed include: single cylinder with crank-chamber scavenge pump and auxiliary suction piston linked to working connecting rod; and two cylinder engines with a rotary scavenge pump arrangement. Three and four cylinder engines are also discussed in various designs.
Date: September 1935
Creator: Venediger, Herbert J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of the Angle of Afterbody Keel on the Water Performance of a Flying-Boat Hull Model (open access)

The Effect of the Angle of Afterbody Keel on the Water Performance of a Flying-Boat Hull Model

NACA model 11-C was tested according to the general method with the angle of afterbody keel set at five different angles from 2-1/2 degrees to 9 degrees, but without changing other features of the hull. The results of the tests are expressed in curves of test data and of non-dimensional coefficients. At the depth of step used in the tests, 3.3 percent beam, the smaller angles of afterbody keel give greater load-resistance ratios at the hump speed and smaller at high speed than the larger angles of afterbody keel. Comparisons are made of the load-resistance ratios at several other points in the speed range. The effect of variation of the angle of afterbody keel upon the take-off performance of a hypothetical flying boat of 15,000 pounds gross weight having a hull of model 11-C lines is calculated, and the calculations show that the craft with the largest of the angles of afterbody keel tested, 9 degrees, takes off in the least time and distance.
Date: September 1935
Creator: Allison, John M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Eliminating Bats From Buildings. (open access)

Eliminating Bats From Buildings.

Describes the habits of bats and possible places they choose to live, including houses. Provides various methods for repelling them. Argues against killing bats except as a last resort.
Date: September 1935
Creator: Silver, James, b. 1890
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library