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A Dielectric Resonator Stabilized Frequency Modulation Oscillator in the S-BandBanghua, Zhou, Mingsheng, Huang 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 17-20, 1994 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / With the development of the airborne telemetry technique, it will be demanded that the transmitting sets on the missiles are more reliable and smaller. A frequency modulation (FM) oscillator stabilized with a dielectric resonator (DR), which can operates in the S-band directly, is presented. The FM oscillator is of simple circuit, reliable operation in the stabilization, small size, light weight and low cost. It will have a certain prospect of application in the airborne telemetry transmitting sets.
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NETWORK CONNECTIONS BEYOND IEEE 802.11Zettwoch, Robert N. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 18-21, 2004 / Town & Country Resort, San Diego, California / More and more aircraft system designs are incorporating a local-area-network (LAN) using
either Fibre Channel (FC) or Ethernet. To date there hasn’t been a means for creating a FC node
connection between an airborne network and a ground based FC network or for creating a reliable
high-speed Ethernet connection between air and ground. Ethernet connections have had some
success by using the IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN for these types of connections; however, these
connections suffer from many inherent problems using this standard. Problems include the lack of
telemetry spectrum control, security validation, high-speed data transfer efficiency, and channel
acquisition time.
This paper will describe a methodology that utilizes the IRIG-106 PCM standard for
communicating between aircraft and ground-based networks. PCM can solve the aforementioned
problems and it enables the user to take advantage of the many ARTM advances in PCM telemetry
technology [1]. One such advance in technology has been the use of SOQPSK (Tier 1) or Multi-h
CPM (Tier 2) to enable the user to effectively double or more their bandwidth efficiency compared
to PCM/FM (or CPFSK) (Tier 0).
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DEMONSTRATION OF XML ON THE USAF E-9A AIRBORNE TELEMETRY PLATFORM USING JAVAMurray, Ernest 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 20-23, 2003 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / This paper describes the basic foundations of XML and the description of a JAVA-based
eXtensible Markup Language (XML) prototype application being developed for the E-9A
Airborne Telemetry Platform. In an effort to eliminate proprietary software and improve
range safety data exchange, radar boat position data will be tagged with pre-defined
XML tags prior to being transmitted from the E-9A. Ground Station software will then
processes the XML-based boat position data to provided a means for ground station
personnel to strip out data and distribute over the Internet. Leveraging XML for a
telemetry application provides the ability to efficiently exchange telemetry data between
users over the Internet and harness a web based standard with industry wide support.
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AN ETHERNET BASED AIRBORNE DATA ACQUISITION SYSTEMDai, Jiwang, DeSelms, Thomas, Grozalis, Edward 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 20-23, 2003 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / There is growing interest in the airborne instrumentation community to adopt commercial standards
to obtain scalable data rates, standards based interoperability, and utilization of Commercial Off The
Shelf (COTS) products to reduce system costs. However, there has been few such data acquisition
systems developed to date. L-3 Telemetry East has developed a prototype called the Network Data
Acquisition System (NetDAS), which is based on the 10/100 Base-T Ethernet standard,
TCP/UDP/IP network protocols and an industrial Ethernet switch. NetDAS has added network
capability to the legacy MPC-800 telemetry system by replacing the existing formatter module with
a formatter/controller based on a COTS CPU module and a custom designed bridge module.
NetDAS has demonstrated transmission bit rates as high as 20 Mbps from a single unit using
UDP/IP and an Ethernet switch. The NetDAS system has also demonstrated scalable and distributed
architecture.
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F16 MID-LIFE UPGRADE INSTRUMENTATION SYSTEM SOLVING THE PROBLEM OF SPACE IN THE AIRCRAFT AND IN THE RF SPECTRUMSiu, David P. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 27-30, 1997 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / The older F16 jet fighters are currently being flight tested to evaluate the upgraded electronics for aircraft avionics, flight control and weapons systems. An instrumentation system capable of recording three different video signals, recording four Military- Standard-1553B (Mil-Std-1553B) data streams, recording one PCM stream, transmitting the PCM stream, and transmitting two video signals was needed. Using off the shelf equipment, the F16 instrumentation system was design to meet the electronic specifications, limited available space of a small jet fighter, and limited space in the SBand frequency range.
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FILTERING CONSIDERATIONS WHEN TELEMETERING SHOCK AND VIBRATION DATAWalter, Patrick L. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 22-25, 2001 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / The accurate measurement of shock and vibration data via flight telemetry is necessary to validate structural models, indicate off-nominal system performance, and/or generate environmental qualification criteria for airborne systems. Digital telemetry systems require anti-aliasing filters designed into them. If not properly selected and located, these filters can distort recorded time histories and modify their spectral content. This paper provides filter design guidance to optimize the quality of recorded flight structural dynamics data. It is based on the anticipated end use of the data. Examples of filtered shock data are included.
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IN FLIGHT DATA REDUCTION FOR REDUCED BANDWIDTH TRANSMISSIONHicks, William T. 11 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 30-November 02, 1995 / Riviera Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada / The desire to acquire large quantities of high speed vibration and acoustic data during
aircraft testing is usually satisfied through on-board high speed recording methods.
However there is often a need to have some of this data instantly available at the
ground station for flight safety and other purposes.
A Data Processor (DP) has been developed allowing an airborne data acquisition
system to acquire large amounts of wideband analog data, process the data in real-time,
and develop reduced bandwidth information from high bandwidth channels. The
reduced data can be inserted into a Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) stream and
telemetered via a Radio Frequency (RF) link with a potential for a 2000:1 reduction in
bandwidth.
This on-board processing capability also lends itself to additional tasks such as the
generation of a reduced bandwidth marker channel which can flag critical time periods
of data activity. This flagging technique can be used to facilitate ground station
analysis of specific segments of data, resulting in significant cost and time savings.
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FLIGHT TEST INSTRUMENTATION OF THE PUSH-PULL EFFECT ON A CF-18 AIRCRAFTCaballero, Rubén 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 25-28, 1999 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / During high performance fighter aircraft manoeuvres, a fighter pilot may be exposed to a physiological phenomenon known as the “Push-Pull Effect” (reference (ref) [1]). This effect will alter the pilot’s homeostasis whereas blood flow to the brain will be increased during low negative normal acceleration (-Gz) and suddenly decreased during positive normal acceleration (+Gz). It has been hypothesized that this effect can lessen the Gtolerance of the human body thereby making the subject more susceptible to G induced Loss of Consciousness (G-LOC) (refs [2], [3] and [4]). G-LOC is not a desirable state for a pilot in a high performance aircraft such as a CF-18. To better understand and study the Push-Pull Effect on a fighter pilot, the Aerospace Engineering Test Establishment (AETE) and the Defence and Civil Institute of Environmental Medicine (DCIEM) produced an In-Flight Research (IFR) Program sponsored by the Canadian Forces (CF). The aim of this program was to measure the physiological response of relaxed test subjects, unprotected by a G-suit, when exposed to the Push-Pull manoeuvre in flight. This IFR would validate the centrifuge data and confirm that the Push-Pull Effect can occur in flight. This paper will present the instrumentation, design, telemetry system and installation methodology utilized to perform experimental physiological research on a high performance, ejection seat equipped fighter aircraft (CF-18). Also, preliminary results on the Push-Pull Effect, obtained through this IFR Program will be presented.
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Telemetry Range Support Aircraft (TRSA) Program Providing the Navy with Next Generation TM and Range SupportRoudebush, J. Kyle, Hernandez, Jose, Kujiraoka, Scott, Sanchez, Kenneth 10 1900 (has links)
The aircraft currently being used to support the Navy’s mission of Telemetry Reception, Range Safety as well as Range Surveillance/Clearance are reaching the end of their useful life. As a result, there are ongoing efforts to procure a new aircraft and integrate these mission systems in order to continue the support of critical Naval Test Range operations. This paper will detail the current efforts being undertaken to upgrade a Gulfstream 550 to perform Range Support missions for the Multi-service Government Test Ranges.
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