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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Tests were made in the NASA-Ames 40- by 80 Foot Wind Tunnel of a wing semispan with a nacelle (no propeller) from a typical, general aviation twin-engine aircraft. Measurements were made of the effect on drag of the cooling air flow through the nacelle. Internal and external nacelle pressures were measured. It was found that the cooling flow accounts for about 13% of the estimated airplane drag and about 42% of the cooling flow drag is associated with the internal flow. It was concluded that improvements could be made by relocating both the inlet and the outlet of the cooling air.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT PROPULSION AND POWER
    Type: AIAA PAPER 79-1820 , American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Aircraft Systems and Technology Meeting; Aug 20, 1979 - Aug 22, 1979; New York, NY
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Measurements of the drag and of the nacelle internal pressures on a wing and nacelle that housed a horizontally opposed piston engine were made in the 40- by 80-Foot Wind Tunnel at Ames Research Center. These tests are follow-ons to earlier tests made with the same wing and nacelle but in which the engine was replaced with an electric motor and an adjustable orifice plate. In the initial tests the orifice plate was used to control the rate of cooling-air flow through the nacelle and thereby to simulate a range of gasoline engine types. Good agreement was found between the results of those tests and of the test reported here. Also, the upper and lower plenum pressure and cooling-air flow rate were found to be related by conventional equations used to represent the flow through orifices. Tests were run with three cooling air inlet sizes over a free-stream velocity range from 50 to 150 knots, an angle of attack range from 0 deg to 10 deg, and a cowl-flap deflection range from 0 deg to 30 deg. The data were analyzed by computing a flow coefficient similar to that used in the analysis of orifices. It was found that all of the flow coefficient values fell within a band that varied linearly with inlet area. The linear mean line through this band provides an estimate of the relationship between cooling-air flow rate and upper plenum pressure over a wide range of test conditions.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT PROPULSION AND POWER
    Type: SAE PAPER 810623 , Business Aircraft Meeting and Exposition; Apr 07, 1981 - Apr 10, 1981; Wichita, KS
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The pressure recovery of incoming cooling air and the drag associated with engine cooling of a typical general aviation twin-engine aircraft was investigated experimentally. The semispan model was mounted vertically in the 40- by 80-Foot Wind Tunnel at Ames Research Center. The propeller was driven by an electric motor to provide thrust with low vibration levels for the cold-flow configuration. It was found that the propeller slipstream reduces the frontal air spillage around the blunt nacelle shape. Consequently, this slipstream effect promotes flow reattachment at the rear section of the engine nacelle and improves inlet pressure recovery. These effects are most pronounced at high angles of attack, that is, climb condition. For the cruise condition those improvements were more moderate.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT PROPULSION AND POWER
    Type: AIAA PAPER 80-1872 , Aircraft Systems Meeting; Aug 04, 1980 - Aug 06, 1980; Anaheim, CA
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