Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2016
Rather more than twenty years ago the writer published a report on the design of wind tunnel fans: a single fan was implied. The report assumed that the pressure increment appropriate to a given axial wind velocity was known, having been either measured (e.g. on a model), or estimated from data such as the power factor of the wind tunnel. A preliminary calculation to determine rotational speed and solidity was followed by a detailed calculation of the appropriate blade angles; the detailed calculation involved the evaluation of the rotational inflow factor (here called a: in Ref. 1 it was denoted a2). Now most of the quantities involved are functions, implicit or explicit, of the rotational inflow factor, and it is not possible to evaluate it in closed form: some method such as cross-plotting for ranges of a at each radius, or successive approximation by a convergent process, is required. Ref. 1 advocated the latter method.