iPods to be Used as Flight Data Recorders 200
udamahan writes "Flight Global reports small aircraft manufacturer LoPresti is introducing a system that uses an iPod as a flight data recorder. The company states that they chose the iPod for its size, low power requirements, and the 'thousands of developers passionate about writing applications for the iPod.' The article notes that data recorders are typically used for maintenance, flight/safety analysis, or, assuming proper protection, crash investigation."
Shocking... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Shocking... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Shocking... (Score:5, Interesting)
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They're not talking about a Shuffle. I would be very surprised if that spinning hard drive could handle more than a few Gs.
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My flash drive says its good for 2000Gs ! I've been wondering how to test that. iPod's flash is probably something similar. It doesn't matter if the circuitry survives, just the flash.
I am sure these guys [ntscorp.com] can help you out there.
The MIL-STD-901D light weight hammer test [aerospacet.com] will get you there (we see over 2,000 Gs all the time), but I my personal favorite is the 901D heavy weight barge test [hitestlabs.com]. It will only get you about 300Gs worst case (although the shock duration is much longer), but you get to set off 65lb TNT charges. Well worth the price of admission.
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They say the case they sell is crushproof, waterproof, airtight and they make iPod enclosures.
www.otterbox.com
I might buy one eventually because I like listening to music when I swim, and I've heard good things about them. Does anyone know if the iPod stops working at something like 35000 feet or so, and would the container somehow negate this effect? I'm pretty clueless about this stuff, but I assume that case would help somewhat...
Pelican Case or UK Case! (Score:3, Informative)
I wouldn't recommend either company's iPod cases for this application either. Go with something like a Pelican 1200 or UK 5010 so that there's LOTS of foam padding. We're not talking about 15 minutes of jogging followed by a drop from 1 meter,
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Re:Shocking... (Score:4, Funny)
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But please don't flame me with colour theory
Worse still (Score:5, Funny)
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On second thought, it might be easier to search through a pile of charred rubble for a small piece of metal than to find another person with a Zune.
Re:Shocking... (Score:5, Funny)
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Sorry, airline accident victims...
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Hmm (Score:2, Interesting)
Wow. (Score:2, Insightful)
"Black Boxes" are made to survive all kinds of unbelievable crashes, impacts, fires, explosions, etc.. Instead, these brainiacs are going to use something that breaks if it drops out of your pocket. Way to go, guys.
steve
Re:Wow. (Score:4, Funny)
It won't break (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:It won't break (Score:4, Funny)
Absolutely! Similarly, the iPods will be programmed to loop "We Built This City" endlessly, virtually guaranteeing that somebody will show up to scream "Turn that crap off!"
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Then again perhaps they're using solid state memory, but then data recovery is harder (data can be retrieved off tape that has been submerged and damaged etc, this would be much harder with on-chip memory).
Then again.. perhaps these aren't meant to be used in black boxes, and are just for recording data for maintenance etc.
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Why don't they make the plane out of the same material as the black boxes? Problem solved. You can now use the iPod for your music and videos.
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The reason they don't make the whole plane out of the same material as the black box is that if they did, it would be way to heavy to ever get off the ground (and if it did, it would use so much fuel that a plane ticket would cost 10 times as much).
Also, in a plane crash, its not the plane breaking apart that usually causes the deaths, its that sudden stop when the plane hits the ground that gets you, and the heat
Should use these... (Score:3, Informative)
The Monolith [lordpercy.com] mp3 player. Described as 'bomb-proof'. It can also be run over by a car.
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The iPod won.
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iFlight now available at iTunes (Score:3, Funny)
Better than nothing (Score:2)
However, the new generation of small planes now includes glass cockpits and carbon-fibre materials. They make accident investigation
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Show me how to protect an iPod in the same way that a black box is protected. Since the internals of an iPod are not made to anywhere near the heat, shock, chemical, or other requirements of a "black box", then by the time you've provided "proper protection", you will have taken up so much of your cabin space (and perhaps used so much weight) that you could have just used a real "black box" to begin with.
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You take a flash iPod and wrap it in rubber, then wrap that in insulation, then stick the whole thing in a heavy-walled steel box with a thick rubber coating. Or if you can afford it, Titanium (stronger, a little more brittle but that's what the rubber outer is for.)
Do I get a consulting fee for this? :P
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
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Personal Flight Recorder (Score:5, Insightful)
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But, the article says that it will serve as a "digital data recorder, nicknamed 'black boxes' by the general media." That gives me the impression that they really do want this to be the plane's main black box.
Now that I think about it, though,
Re:Personal Flight Recorder (Score:4, Insightful)
A whole new meaning... (Score:5, Funny)
And then! (Score:4, Funny)
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Flash drives would be better.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Mine has been dropped, smashed, been through both washing machine and dryer. All with no noticable damage and no dataloss.
My HDD recorder, on the other hand, was destroyed by a small amount of coca cola
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The most notable would be flying off a lecture room table and hitting the floor two meters below.
Still works perfectly.
Re:Flash drives would be better.. (Score:4, Funny)
do you go to giant school or something?
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Ok, probably the drive survived a bit, but the supporting hardware was shredded.
how on earth did you get coke on a HDD?
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The process of running to the train station stimulated the coke to the level that it exited its bottle and got friendly with my H340.
Although only a small quantity of coke had escaped, it totalled the H340's hard drive
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My ipod survived getting utterly soaked in a downpour, but I got it dry in time.
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Hehe (Score:2)
FAA Regs (Score:2, Funny)
I can just image it: "At this time the cabin crew would like to remind the flight crew to turn off the flight recorder. We'll let you know when we reach cruising altitide and it is safe to turn the device back on".
Before anyone feels the need to inform me that Advisory Circulars are not the same as FAA regulations, I know already!
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That only applies to IFR flight. Even so, if the operator can determine that the device poses no interference hazard, they can exempt it.
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A general aviation pilot can even use non-aviation radio transmitters (There are a number of pilots who are also ham radio operators and have some VERY sophisticated multiband radio setups in their planes) in flight if they wish - they just take on legal liability for any negative effects of doing so.
The
Excellent Idea... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Excellent Idea...??? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Excellent Idea...NOT (Score:2)
What developers? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I don't know what it takes to get it so information can show up in the UI, but I think this "recorder" may just be using the iPod as a mass storage device. The only easy way to get information to show up on the iPod without syncing is to save a note in a particular folder.
See (Score:4, Funny)
iPod as a model airplane flight recorder (Score:4, Informative)
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Trouble (Score:4, Interesting)
I finally fixed it by ripping the thing apart and re-seating the drive cable. But still...
What about all the failed harddrives? (Score:3, Insightful)
I can see the headlines now... (Score:5, Funny)
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Now Playing: Learning to Cr^H^H Fly.
On an unrelated note, Apple announced a new/faster way to remove the battery from an iPod.
You've gotta be kidding! (Score:2, Flamebait)
It's kinda sad.... (Score:2, Insightful)
There are alot of people saying that this is stupid because their iPod
breaks when it falls out of thier pocket. I would say RTFA but, if you can't
bother to read the whole posting on
kind of intelligent posting.
Go on, -1 troll me. See if I give a fsck, I still call BS when I see it.
Is it some kind of a joke? (Score:2, Insightful)
iPod's don't like to get high... (Score:2, Interesting)
Flash i hope (Score:2)
I dont care what protective case you put it in, a 20000 feet drop is going to kill a mechincal hardddrive.
what about the car? (Score:2, Interesting)
AND WHAT ABOUT MY FLYING CAR!!! I WANT MY FLYING CAR!!! With the iPod option!
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Shit where?
Streaming Blackbox? (Score:3, Interesting)
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I suspect you don't know any better, which is why you asked the question.
The short answer is that it would not be technologically feasible.
The long answer:
1. Each stream of data is going to need its own radio channel/cell connection/other
2. The FAA is going to have to buy gobs of storage across the country & pay for it all to be managed
3. Every private pilot is going to have to buy a new avionics package
That's just off the t
Ashes to Ashes (Score:2)
"Ground control to Major Tom... your circuit's dead... there's something wrong! Can you hear me Major Tom? Can you hear me Major Tom?"
This wil never work (Score:5, Funny)
Won't the iPod disrupt the plane's flight electronics and CAUSE crashes, though? That's why the flight attendants always remind us that the use of portable electronic devices during takeoff and landing is forbidden, right?
Nothing new... iPod not required (Score:2)
News at 11: A Breakthrough in NTSB investigation (Score:3, Funny)
"NTSB crash investigators have been baffled as to the cause of the private plane crash that killed Steve Jobs and four others last week, but today they made a major breakthrough in their investigation. The crash investigators were initially stymied by the sequence of events leading up to the crash. Apparently, the initial confusion was resolved once they discovered the Crash.Events playback was set to shuffle."
"In a related story, Conspiracy therorists are not buying the explanation. They say that they have proof that the flight data recorder shows the plane was in level flight after having slammed into the Mountain. They insist that this was a plot financed by former Microsoft President Bill Gates to 'send a message' that Microsoft is not to be trifled with."
"Mr Gates was unavailable for comment as he was attending a conference on Aids in Africa."
"To counter these claims, the NTSB has offered to share crash evidence with the general public, just as soon as they can figure out how to bypass the DRM features without running afoul of the DMCA."
Unintended consequences of this (Score:2)
Within 20 minutes of the plane going down, a dozen RIAA representatives, dressed in police-style raid jackets, were on site to offer their "assistance" to the FAA in locating the black box.
"Since black boxes are, by definition, black, and current iPod Nanos only come in black on the 8GB model, we knew we would have a lot of data to comb through." remarked the lead RIAA investigator, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "We located the device, and analyzed it. Among the contents, we found Dave Matthew's '
DRM? (Score:2)
Been there done that. (Score:2)
Re:OMG NAME! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OMG NAME! (if made by Nintendo) (Score:2)
I prefer "iDead"
"WiiDead"
*ba-dum-dum*
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If the pilot dies then the iPod will be crucial in getting this information.
Re:Without certification (Score:4, Interesting)
On experimental aircraft, yes. On certified aircraft, no.
I'm not sure what value would be gained, though... about the best that could be recorded is OBS position and CDI deflection, maybe turn rate and bank angle if the turn coordinator/artificial horizon can provide feedback.
If the aircraft has a GPS (big if), I guess you could record position and velocity data.
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But what's the point if they can already tell that?
At t = t(impact):
Position = Where the crater is
Velocity = 0
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It is a GPS combined with a certified file format that is signed by the apparatus. Gliderpilots use it in contests. Search for
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For now.
The FAA's certification bureaucracy is legendary; but is navigable. They can get STCs (Supplemental Type Certificates) for different models of aircraft, and many others can probably get 337's (Major Repair and/or Major Alteration Authorization) for theirs.
I think the real boon here is just getting one to market. Somebody will build a better one, with internal flash storage instead of an i-pod port. Especially for new GA aircraft with the Ga
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Jokes apart, i think the nano flash-based stuff is what they would prefer. Not the hard-disk based for flights.
Certification itself would take 5 years, by which time almost all hard-disk iPods running today would be extinct.