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  • Chemistry  (519)
  • Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance  (48)
  • 1945-1949  (567)
  • 1946  (291)
  • 1945  (276)
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  • 1945-1949  (567)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: An investigation was conducted to compare the performance of two 25-ft-diam rotors which had identical dimensions and were similar in construction but different in blade airfoil-sections. Tests were conducted at indicated blade pitch angles from 3 degrees to 11.5 degrees and rotor speeds of 200, 290, and 371 rpm. The 23012.6 rotor required 2 percent less power to hover than the 0012.6. At thrust coefficients above design, the performance of the 23012.6 became better than the 0012.6 rotor.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-749 , NACA-MR-L6D24
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-79 , NACA-ARR-L5G19
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A relatively simple equation has been found to express with fair accuracy, variation in manifold-charge temperature with charge in engine operating conditions. This equation and associated curves have been checked by multi cylinder-engine data, both test stand and flight, over a wide range of operating conditions. Average mixture temperatures, predicted by the equations of this report, agree reasonably well with results within the same range of carburetor-air temperatures from laboratories and test stands other than the NACA.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-E-273 , NACA-MR-E5L03
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: An investigation has been conducted in the Langley rectangular high-speed tunnel to determine the effect of compressibility on the pressure distribution for a modified NACA 65,3-019 airfoil having a 0.20-chord flap. The investigation was made for an angle-of-attack range extending from -2 to 12 deg at .20 flap deflections from 0 to -12 deg. Test data were obtained for Mach numbers from 0.28 to approximately 0.74. The results show that the effectiveness of the trailing-edge-type control surface rapidly decreased and approached zero as the Mach number increased above the critical value.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-76 , NACA-ACR-L5G31A
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Flat-plate flaps with no wing cutouts and flaps having Clark Y sections with corresponding cutouts made in wing were tested for various flap deflections, chord-wise locations, and gaps between flaps and airfoil contour. The drag was slightly lower for wing with airfoil section flaps. Satisfactory aileron effectiveness was obtained with flap gap of 20% wing chord and flap-nose location of 80 percent wing chord behind leading edge. Airflow was smooth and buffeting negligible.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-56 , NACA-ARR-L5B17
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: An investigation of a model of a large four-engine bomber was conducted in the Langley 19-f'oot pressure tunnel to determine the effects of several wing and nacelle modifications on drag characteristics and air flow characteristics at the tail. Leading-edge gloves, trailing-edge extensions, and modified nacelle afterbodies were tested individual ly and in combination. The effects of the various modifications were determined by force tests, tuft observations, and turbulence s1ITveys in the region of the tail. Tests were made with fixed and natural transition on the wing and with propellers operating and propellers off. Most of the tests were con- ducted at a Reynolds number of approximately 2.6 x 106. The results indicated that application of certain of the modifications provided worth-while improvements in the characteristics or the model. The flow over the wing and flaps was improved, the drag was reduced, and the turbulence in the region of the tail was reduced. Trailing-edge extensions were the most effective individual modification in improving the flow over the wing with wing flaps neutral, cowl and intercooler flaps clos ed. Modified nacelle afterbodies were the most effectiv8 individual edification in reducing drag with either fixed or natural transition on the wing; however, trailin6-edge extensions were slightly more effective with fixed transition. Combinations of either leading or trailing-edge extensions and modified afterbodies were more effective than either modification alone. With cowl and intercooler flaps open, trailing-edge extensions with modified afterbodies provided substantial improvement in flow and drag characteristics. With wing flaps deflected, enclosing the flap behind the inboard nacelle within an extended afterbody or cutting the flaps at the nacelle appeared. to be the most promising methods of improving the f low over the flaps and the tail. Although the results of hot-wire-anenometer surveys were not conclusive in regard to buffeting characteristics, the modifications did educe the turbulence at the tail with wing flaps both neutral and deflected. The modifications, as a rule, were favorable to maximum lift. Appreciable reductions in longitudinal stability of the model were caused by addition of leading -edge gloves and tr ailing -edge extensions.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-114 , NACA-ARR-L5J05
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: In conjunction with a program of research on the general problem of stability of airplanes in the climbing condition, tests have been made of a spring-loaded tb which. is referred to as a ?springy tab,? installed on the elevator of a low-wing scout bomber. The tab was arranged to deflect upward with decrease in speed which caused an increase in the pull force required to trim at low speeds and thereby increased the stick-free static longitudinal stability of the airplane. It was found that the springy tab would increase the stick-free stability in all flight conditions, would reduce the danger of inadvertent stalling because of the definite pull force required to stall the airplane with power on, would reduce the effect of center-of-gravity position on stick-free static stability, and would have little effect on the elevator stick forces in accelerated f11ght. Another advantage of the springy tab is that it might be used to provide almost any desired variation of elevator stick force with speed by adjusting the tab hinge-moment characteristics and the variation of spring moment with tab deflection. Unlike the bungee and the bobweight, the springy tab would provide stick-free static stability without requiring a pull force to hold the stick back while taxying. A device similar to the springy tab may be used on the rudder or ailerons to eliminate undesirable trim-force variations with speed.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-210 , NACA-ARR-L5I20
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: As a part of a program of the NACA directed toward increasing the efficiency of compressors and turbines, data were obtained for application to the design of entrance vanes for axfax-flow compressors or turbines. A series of blower-blade sections with relatively high critical speeds have been developed for turning air efficiently from 0 deg to 80 deg starting with an axial direction. Tests were made of five NACA 65-series blower blades (modified NACA 65(216)-010 airfoils) and of four experimentally designed blower blades in a stationary cascade at low Mach numbers. The turning effectiveness and the pressure distributions of these blade sections at various angles of attack were evaluated over a range of solidities near 1. Entrance-vane design charts are presented that give a blade section and angle of attack for any desired turning angle. The blades thus obtained operate with peak-free pressure distributions. Approximate critical Mach numbers were calculated from the pressure distributions.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-WR-L-188 , NACA-ACR-L5G18
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: There are forwarded herewith the results of blade motion and bouncing tests on the Kellett KD-1 three-bladed autogiro. Motion picture records and two-component accelerometer records were taken in flight during glides at air speeds from 30 miles per hour to 100 miles per hour indicator readings. Calibration curves of correct indicated air speed and rotor speed as functions of air speed meter reading were established with a trailing pitot-static head and a rotoscope, at 2,000 ft. altitude and an air density of 0.00231 slug/ cu. ft., all tests being made at approximately that density.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-MR-X-1935
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: As part of an investigation to increase the power output of the V-1710-93 engine at altitude, the engine-stage supercharger was combined with a constant-area vaneless diffuser designed to improve the performance of the engine-stage supercharger at the rated engine operating point. The performance of the modified supercharger was investigated in a variable-component supercharger test rig and compared with that of the standard supercharger with an 8-vaned diffuser. A separate evaluation of the component efficiencies and a study of the flow characteristics of the modified supercharger was made possible by internal diffuser instrumentation. At the volume flow required by the engine for rated operating conditions, the modified supercharger increased the over-all adiabatic efficiency 0.05 and the over-all pressure coefficient 0.035. Furthermore, the capacity of the engine-stage supercharger was increased by replacing the standard 8-vaned diffuser with the vaneless diffuser. The peak over-all adiabatic efficiency for the modified supercharger, however, was 0.05 to 0.07 lower than that of the standard unit over the range of tip speeds investigated. The improved performance of the modified supercharger at rated engine operating conditions resulted from a shift of the point of peak adiabatic efficiency and pressure coefficient of the standard supercharger to a higher flow. The energy loss through the vaneless diffuser was found to be small. Because of the restricted diffuser diameter, however, diffusion was inadequate, which resulted in a relatively small static-pressure rise through the diffuser, high diffuser-exit velocities, and excessive collector-case losses.
    Keywords: Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NACA-RM-E6K22
    Format: application/pdf
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