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
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:arizona.edu/oai:arizona.openrepository.com:10150/607371 |
Date | 10 1900 |
Creators | Thames, Fred |
Contributors | Avalon Electronics Ltd |
Publisher | International Foundation for Telemetering |
Source Sets | University of Arizona |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | text, Proceedings |
Rights | Copyright © International Foundation for Telemetering |
Relation | http://www.telemetry.org/ |
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