Abstract:
The investigation was undertaken in response to a request from the Technical Department of the Air Board for information as to the most sensitive form of yawmeter, and for a calibration curve for such an instrument. The original form of yawmeter suggested by Mr. (now Sir) Horace Darwin was used by Mr. E. T. Busk in his experiments in 1912 (see Rpt. 1912-13, p. 254) and a yawmeter on the same principle has been used in several wind channel investigations at the N.P.L. and has been described in R. and M. 156 and 371. A direct reading instrument of this type was described by Sir Horace Darwin in his Wilbur Wright Lecture of 1913. The variation of pressure with angle of inclination to the wind was determined on several sizes of pitot tubes, and from this curve it was predicted that the best angle between the axes of the two tubes of the yawmeter would be 120 deg. The sensitivity was found experimentally to be about 1.7 times as great as for the original form in which the angle was 90 deg. Various forms of yawmeter were tested until one was found which gave a result which could have been predicted from the experiment with the single pitot tube giving greatest sensitivity. The experiments indicate that, in plan view, the arms of the yawmeter should be straight and bevelled to a sharp edge at the end. The embraced angle should be 120 deg and the tube should not be of very small diameter. A tube of 0".30 internal diameter was found to be satisfactory, and a calibration curve for this instrument is given in the report. The instrument is capable of measuring angles with considerable accuracy, and can be used on aircraft or in the wind channel. If measurements are required in one plane only, they can be made very simply by turning the yawmeter till the pressure difference is zero, and reacting off the angle from a degree scale.