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Technical Paper

DEVELOPMENT AND DESIGN OF HYDRAULIC-BRAKE UNITS1

1925-01-01
250045
The principles of hydraulics have long been known and the use of a liquid for transmitting power has proved safe and reliable in many applications, notably in the operation of passenger elevators. Hence it was natural to make use of these principles in a device for controlling an automobile under traffic conditions that demand an efficient and dependable braking mechanism. The ideal of equalized braking-effort is sought but variation in the coefficient of friction between brake-bands and brake-drums and between tires and road introduces complications, so we must be content for the present with the nearest possible approach to equalized pressure at the brake-bands. In the hydraulic system, pressure is transmitted equally throughout the liquid and to the levers that actuate the brake-bands. These levers are also designed to transmit the pressure equally to the brake-bands on all four wheels.
Technical Paper

APPLYING JIGS AND FIXTURES TO ENGINE-BLOCK MACHINING

1925-01-01
250056
Stating first the several important factors affecting jig-and-fixture design, the author emphasizes the necessity for cooperation between the engineering and the tool-engineering department and says that, in the plant specified, the tool engineer determines the position of locating points for machining operations on the engine block. Details of the first machining operation are given and the methods of loading and clamping the work are outlined. By adhering to accepted principles of design, and by utilizing all other means of cost-reduction, equipment of the plant with adequate jigs and fixtures is accomplished at minimum expense. Use of duplicate clamping parts on as many jigs as possible saves time and reduces the stock of replacement parts needed. Strength and rigidity of fixtures are essential. Heavy base-sections are necessary, bushing plates should have a section deep enough to prevent warping and ample chip-clearance should be provided between the fixture and the work.
Technical Paper

PREVENTION OF SHIMMY BY HYDRAULIC STEERING-CONTROL

1925-01-01
250048
Experiments with hydraulic steering-control with the object of preventing or reducing shimmying and tramping were made by the author, who asserts that the elimination of backlash by doing away with mechanical joints and by holding the front wheels as rigid as the rear wheels has been amply proved by the results to be a long step in the right direction. With a Marmon car fitted with an hydraulic steering-system and driven over the roughest roads it was impossible to discern any front-wheel wabble as the car approached and passed the observer.
Technical Paper

OPERATION OF THE AIR MAIL SERVICE

1925-01-01
250070
The personnel and the ground facilities that have produced such excellent results in the Air Mail Service are discussed apart from the flying equipment and its operation in the air. An airway is on the ground and the performance and safety of the pilots are dependent upon the ground facilities provided and the efficiency of the ground personnel. Pilots perform a highly important part in the operation of airlines and no matter how good the flying equipment may be, the desired results cannot be obtained without thoroughly trained and capable pilots. When selecting new pilots, the Air Mail Service looks for men who handle an airplane in a businesslike way and who are able, without taking unnecessary risks, to fly the ship without letting the ship fly them.
Technical Paper

SOME ASPECTS OF AIRPLANE INSPECTION

1925-01-01
250069
Following a description of airplane structure, the author discusses structural requirements and outlines the main features of properly coordinating the engineering and the manufacturing activities. He says that each of the three subdivisions of airplane design has its own series of calculations, these being related to predictions of performance before the machine is built, to stability determinations and to the design of a self-contained structure of sufficient strength to withstand any stresses developed in flight or in landing. He states also that no inspection is worth the name or the money spent on it that does not include constructive work and a knowledge at all times that the intentions of the designers are being carried out in detail so that the safety of the craft is assured. Materials used in aircraft should be light and easily workable and should possess the desired physical and chemical properties; they must have the specified cross-section and be free from defects.
Technical Paper

EYE-BOLT STRESSES AS DETERMINED BY PHOTOELASTIC TEST

1925-01-01
250068
Principal stresses in one type of eye-bolt have been determined in the laboratory of photoelasticity at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by the photoelastic method. In the test, an eye-bolt, designed in accordance with a method suggested for circular eyes in a course in machine design by the Institute, was made of celluloid 0.25 in. thick, 1 in. wide on either side of the eye, with a 1.405-in. diameter of eye, and a 1.333-in. width of shank. Steel loading-plates were pinned to the broadened end of the shank and a load of 100 lb. was suspended from the bolt, which gave a mean stress of 300 lb. per sq. in. in the shank. Plain polarized light was passed through the celluloid model and the isoclinic lines, or lines of equal inclination of principal stress, were observed and recorded. Two families of lines of principal stress, designated as P and Q stresses, were determined graphically from these isoclinic lines.
Technical Paper

AN ANALYSIS OF MACHINE-TOOL MAINTENANCE

1925-01-01
250060
Machine-repair analysis and a criticism of present-day equipment, with analytical tables based on data collected from a 5 months' study, are followed by conclusions relative to the reliability of present-day equipment. Eight types of common machine-tools are considered and the maintenance advantage of one over the other is deduced from the consolidated tables based on monthly reports. A comparison of each class of machine-tools with the others is made, as well as a summary of the weaknesses of each class from the frequency of repairs of the elementary parts. The attention of the builders is drawn to the conditions that the shop encounters with their equipment. A maintenance budget-system is described that has been installed in one plant to give the men a comparative idea of particular equipment that is running in excess of the budget time. It also serves in lieu of an inspection of the conditions of the equipment and is an indication of the time when overhauling is advisable.
Technical Paper

HOW TO SELECT MACHINE-TOOLS1

1925-01-01
250059
The selection of machine-tools is largely a matter of judgment, based on the consideration of many variable factors. No fixed rules can be laid down, but the uses to which the machines are put are divided roughly into three classes which govern to a large extent the types of machine that should be purchased, whether they should be machines of a wide range of usefulness, standardized machines equipped with special tooling or special-purpose machines of special design capable of very large and continuous production. To determine into which of these classes the requirement for new machines falls, an analysis should be made of the following factors: (a) quantity of production required and its duration, (b) method of machining and tolerances and finish required, (c) possibility of a change in design of the product, (d) cost of production, (e) when delivery of machine is required, and (f) money available for the purchase.
Technical Paper

SOME ASPECTS OF AIRCRAFT-ENGINE DEVELOPMENT

1925-01-01
250066
Infallible performance and economical operation are the bases of successful commercial flying. Airplanes, having passed through the experimental and demonstration periods, must now prove their usefulness. Heretofore, because of military requirements, designers have fostered the use of power rather than refinement of design to obtain performance, but commercial operation demands efficiency, and in each of the four essentials, namely, dependability, size, total powerplant weight and cost, opportunity for decided improvement still exists. The requirements and limiting factors of each of these essentials are discussed in turn and the conclusion is drawn that a relation exists between the amount of thrust delivered to the air and the weight put into an airplane for its propulsion. To obtain the best over-all performance, if these terms are considered as a fraction, the numerator should have the maximum and the denominator the minimum value.
Technical Paper

DIE-CASTINGS MADE OF NON-FERROUS METALS1

1925-01-01
250065
Subsequent to an historical review of die-casting, briefly stated, the author covers the subject of present die-casting practices comprehensively and conveys a large amount of specific information. Because many different methods of producing castings exist outside the sand-casting realm, he says that some confusion prevails as to the exact definition of the term “die-casting.” Such castings may be produced in metallic or in non-metallic long-life molds, or in combination with destructible cores. They may be filled by gravity and known as “permanent-mold castings”; or by centrifugal force and known as “centrifugal castings”; or by filling the mold by gravity and, after the outer skin has become chilled, pouring out the excess metal. The last named are known as “slush castings.” On the other hand, a die-casting may be defined as a casting formed in a metallic mold or die, from metal subjected to mechanical or gaseous pressure while in the molten state.
Technical Paper

THE TESTING OF SHEET STEEL

1925-01-01
250064
Will sheet steel that is to be used in the manufacture of automobile parts form the parts for which it is intended without breaking, buckling or pulling coarse at the sharp corners is a question, the answer to which is sought through a series of tests applied to samples of the material by the Packard Motor Car Co. Three sheets are selected from different parts of every 1000 sheets received. After sections have been removed from the ends of these sample sheets, four test pieces are taken from each sheet at specified locations and these last samples are subjected to Erichsen, Rockwell and tensile-strength tests, each of which is discussed.
Technical Paper

MEASUREMENT OF ENGINE VIBRATION PHENOMENA

1925-01-01
250005
Smooth operation of motor cars becomes increasingly important as average driving-speeds become higher and as the public demands greater luxury and freedom from vibration. An analysis of vibration shows that it is caused by forces which can be calculated with considerable accuracy. Vibration itself is very complex, due to the inter-relation of forces, deflection and periodicity in the parts of the engine. In this paper a number of indicating and recording instruments devised for recording the actual resultant vibration and determining its exact character are described and their operation explained. Vibration due to unbalance of rotating parts, piston unbalance inherent in four-cylinder engines, bending of the crankshaft, centrifugal force, and torsional periods are discussed. Indicator-diagrams of the various kinds of vibration are shown. Unbalanced force and elastic reaction are the two general causes of vibration.
Technical Paper

BEST LOCATION FOR CARBURETER INTAKE1

1925-01-01
250007
Tests to determine the location under the hood of a motor vehicle where the air-intake of the carbureter will be exposed to the least dust were made by the agricultural engineering division of the University of California at Davis, Cal., and the results are given in the hope that they will serve a useful purpose. Of three types of dust-screen devised to catch the dust at different locations so that it could be photographed, and still would present little hindrance to passage of the air from point to point under the hood, the most effective was one of coarse hospital gauze stretched over frames set in transverse vertical positions on either side of and above the engine. The tests were made on two phaetons and a speed truck, run for less than 3 miles and following another car on a dusty road.
Technical Paper

CONTROL OF DETONATION

1924-01-01
240001
Investigations indicate that detonation may be controlled by retarding the rate of combustion by chemicals added to the mixture, which serve to increase its specific heat and prevent excessive temperature, and by reducing the temperature of the walls of the combustion-chamber, so that the temperature of the charge previous to ignition will be lower and thus insure a normal rate of combustion. The present discussion is devoted to methods of controlling the temperature of the charge before and after the mixture enters the combustion-chamber, and before normal ignition occurs. Tests previously made on a poppet-valve engine and on a sleeve-valve engine revealed the impracticability of applying the laboratory methods used at that time to commercial practice and the need of eliminating some of the difficulties inherent in those methods of detonation control. The various changes made in the engine are described, including the specially designed spark-plugs.
Technical Paper

DEVELOPMENTS IN MOTORBUS-BODY DESIGN1

1924-01-01
240045
Classes of service already provided by the street-car and the passenger automobile influence the expectations of the motorbus passenger regarding the quality of transportation service afforded by the motorbus. If an operator persuades people to ride in his motorbuses, it will be because they offer safety, economy, convenience and comfort to a greater degree than that offered by competitive transportation media. Since the public has demonstrated that, under favorable conditions, it will patronize the motorbus to an extent that yields a profit to the operators, the future success of this means of transportation lies wholly within the control of the motorbus builders and those who operate it. Of the factors that determine the degree of success attained, motorbus-body design bulks very large. Discussion of the subject is presented from the viewpoint of the passenger, as the motorbus approaches him, as he enters it and as he judges the quality of transportation it affords.
Technical Paper

ADAPTING MOTOR CARS TO LOW-PRESSURE TIRES

1924-01-01
240040
Balloon tires have caused the points at which the greatest trouble formerly occurred to be reversed; the greatest wear hitherto has occurred on the rear tires; now it occurs on the front. The carcasses of old tires were heavy and thick and carried a large part of the load; balloon tires are flexible and will support very little load. The air-pressure carries the load and gives greater cushioning effect. Four-ply tires have proved to be the most satisfactory and have none of the disadvantages of high-pressure tires. Balloon tires steer harder than high-pressure tires because of lower air-pressure, which necessitates a greater area of contact. Steering resistance is caused by the load on the tire and the increased area of contact. Many designers, in making the steering gear free to overcome steering resistance, make wheel-twitching possible. Shimmying may be classified as low-speed and high-speed, the latter occurring at speeds between 35 and 40 m.p.h. and being very violent.
Technical Paper

AIR-SPRINGS AND THE MEASUREMENT OF RIDING-QUALITY

1924-01-01
240039
An air-spring and a steel-spring combination has a characteristic load-curve that allows maximum flexibility in the general working-range of the axle yet has an increasing resistance to dissipate large shock-loads. By varying the compression volume in the air-spring, the load curve of the combination can be made more flexible or stiffer as occasion demands. Tests show that the steel-spring vibration alone had a duration of 5½ sec. with a period of 87.2 vibrations per min.; the combination, a 3-sec. duration with 60.0 vibrations per min. Field tests of front-axle movement were made, the test apparatus for these and other tests being illustrated and explained. The maximum axle-movement either above or below the normal line is increased when using air-springs, and the subsequent rebound shows more action on the underside of the normal line, the general tendency of the air-springs being to float the chassis on a slightly higher plane at the time of rebound.
Technical Paper

CORRECTION OF BALLOON-TIRE SHIMMYING

1924-01-01
240041
Shimmying was noticeable before four-wheel brakes began to be used, but since that time the trouble has been greatly increased. Two kinds are distinguishable; (a) low-speed shimmying, a violent wabble of the front wheels about the king-pins without a bouncing of the front axle, and (b) high-speed shimmying, a severe bouncing of the front axle during which one hub is up while the other is down. This occurs at somewhat higher tire-pressures and at high car-speed. Believing that both forms are not correctible by changing the design of the tire and are only slightly affected by changes in the steering-gear, efforts were directed toward prevention rather than correction.
Technical Paper

MOTOR-CAR BUMPERS

1924-01-01
240044
A bumper is a bar attached transversely in front of or behind a car body to prevent contact between an obstruction and the car body or to cushion the shock of collision between vehicles. The impact-bars have various sectional forms, from flat to round and from tubes to channels, and are composed of steel, wood or rubberized fabric. The attaching devices are sometimes yielding, sometimes rigid. The evolution of the bumper is shown in the records of the Patent Office. Early types had yielding attaching-parts and rigid impact-parts. These were followed by types having a rigid bar connected with the frame by only a spiral spring, by those having channel-steel impact-bars and others having round spring-steel extending from the frame-horns. A strip of rectangular spring-steel was then used by a Western blacksmith, and later a similar non-reinforced bumper appeared which was cut in two in the middle, the ends being overlapped and the overlapped parts clamped together.
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