Index of NACA Technical Publications


Book Description



















Static Longitudinal Characteristics at High Subsonic Speeds of a Complete Airplane Model with a Highly Tapered Wing Having the 0.80 Chord Line Unswept and with Several Tail Configurations


Book Description

An investigation was made at high subsonic speeds of a complete model having a highly tapered wing and several tail configurations. The basic aspect-ratio-4.00 wing had a zero taper and an unswept 0.80 chord line. Several aspect-ratio modifications to the basic wing were made by clipping off portions of the wing tips. The complete model was tested with a chord-plane tail, a T-tail, and a biplane tail (combined T-tail and chord-plane tail). The model was tested in the Langley high-speed 7- by 10-foot tunnel at Mach numbers from 0.60 to 0.92. The data show that, when reduced to the same static margin, all the tail configurations tested on the model provided fairly good stability characteristics, the biplane tail giving the best overall characteristics as regards pitching-moment linearity. Changes in static margin at zero lift coefficient with Mach number were small for the model with these tails over the Mach number range investigated.




Full-scale Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Model Employing a Sailwing Concept


Book Description

An investigation has been conducted in the Langley full-scale tunnel to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of a full-scale model employing a sailwing concept and having a wing aspect ratio of 11.5. The wing had a rigid leading-edge spar, rigid root and wing-tip ribs with a trailing-edge stretched between these ribs, and a fabric covering stretched between the leading and trailing edeges. The fabric of the sail maintained a smooth airfoil contour over the installed angle-of-attack range, but some rippling occurred at the trailing edge near the wing root as the wing stalled. The aerodynamic characteristics of the sailwing, in particular the maximum lift and maximum lift-drag ratio, compared favorably with those of conventional hard wings. A lateral-control device based on the wing-warp principle was effective at angles of attack below that for wing stall, but at angles near stall, the control effectiveness became low and nonlinear.




NASA Scientific and Technical Reports


Book Description