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AN OPEN-ARCHITECTURE APPROACH TO SCALEABLE DATA CAPTUREMason, Terry, Thames, Fred 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 25-28, 1999 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / The ultra high capacity disk-based data recorders now entering service offer not just a convenient and inexpensive alternative to conventional tape systems for applications like Telemetry and Flight Test but also a unique opportunity to rethink the classical models for data capture, analysis and storage. Based on ‘open architecture’ interface standards- typically SCSI-this new generation of products represents an entirely new approach to the way data is handled. But the techniques they employ are equally applicable to any SCSI storage device. This Paper discusses a range of practical scenarios illustrating how it is now possible to `mix-and-match’ recording technologies at will-disk-array, DLT, DTF, ExaByte, JAZ, ZIP, DVD, etc.- to produce an almost infinite combination of readily scaleable plug-and-play data capture, analysis and archiving solutions. The cost and reliability benefits arising from the use of standard mass-produced storage sub-systems are also considered
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A NEW GENERATION OF DATA RECORDERS BASED ON DLT TECHNOLOGYThames, Fred 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 26-29, 1998 / Town & Country Resort Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / As the performance of inexpensive commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) data storage devices
continues to increase, the temptation to use them as the basis for data capture products
for military and industrial applications becomes ever more compelling. For example, the
Digital Linear Tape (DLT) format now offers a 270 Gigabits per cassette capacity at a
sustained transfer rate of 40 Mbits/s – performance which would have cost tens or even
hundreds of thousands of dollars per system just a few years ago. But to transplant such a
device from its benign office habitat into a data capture product which will function
reliably and consistently in a wide range of field and platform environments is an
engineering task fully as difficult and complex as designing an environmentally robust
recorder from scratch. This paper discusses the problems which typically have to be
overcome; environmental protection, reliability, data integrity, power supplies, software
issues, control and data interfacing, etc., citing practical examples of analog and digital
DLT-based data recorders which are now entering service for telemetry, intelligence
gathering, anti-submarine warfare and related applications
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NOW IS THE RIGHT TIME FOR SOLID STATEBerard, Al, Nixon, Chris, Lockard, Michael 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 23-26, 2000 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / For the last 30 years Magnetic Tape Systems have been the primary means of recording data from
airborne instrumentation systems. Increasing data rates and harsh environmental requirements have
often exceeded the ability of tape-based systems to keep pace with technology. Throughout this time
data recordings have been made mostly with analog longitudinal systems and most recently with
digital recording systems that record on commercial DLT, and super VHS tape media. The recordings
are played back with the same type of tape device allowing for the data to be processed and/or
archived. Since not all data reduction facilities can process the same type of tape media, often tapes
are dubbed from one type of tape media format to another, corrupting the translated data. This paper
examines operational and data reduction benefits, and life cycle cost of Solid State Recorders as a
replacement for existing airborne tape recorders.
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