tommylommykins wrote:I have worked on commercial airliner jet engine software.
That 10 terabytes per 30 seconds number is fishy. That comes out to 5.8 gigabytes per second. There aren't many things that can record data to long term storage that fast, especially suitable for attaching to a jet engine. As a guess, Pratt has summed all the raw data rates from all the sensors built into the engine. I'd even seriously doubt that the Engine Controller would even be able to process that much raw data. CPUs that get put in planes are ruggedized and slow.
Plus, nobody has the money to sit and watch what an aeroplane engine is doing in flight, so there is no realtime data transmission at all. In fact, aero engines only bother saving data when something has gone wrong: It'd typically record an errorcode and save a snapshot of some other vital parameters for later analysis -- very similar to the sort of data logging you might get with a normal car engine.
This is going way off-topic but Rolls-Royce is actually monitoring all of its jet engines world wide during each flight. All of the data analysis is automated obviously, the system only passes anomalies on to some engineers in Bristol. And like you said, the data rate doesn't come close to 5.8 GB/s (they only use 25 sensors and take just a few snapshots during each flight).
Rolls Royce has some info here.
I wouldn't be surprised if P&W generate that amount of data during engine testing&development but obviously not during a normal flight.
As for F1 I find it hard to believe the above mentioned figure of 27 TB for a race weekend. If that's for two cars, and each car spends 4 hours on track each weekend, that's still almost 1 GB for every second of driving. The same article claims 200 sensors are on the car (seems a bit high to me, does anyone have other info?) so that's still 5 MB/s for every sensor. Conclusion is that those 27 TB surely are not only data logged on the car, or the figure is simply wrong.
As for the unit used on the Williams, the rake installed in front of the rear wing contains about 80 pitot tubes. So no surprise that they need extra storage capacity (it adds probably 50% of the amount of sensors they are normally using). An extra benefit would be they can go out and collect their data, come back to the garage, take the drive out and start transferring the data back to England immediately while the car can go out again for some other test. I can imagine the happy faces back at the factory if they get their precious data quickly.
