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by margalabargala 870 days ago
I don't think the problem you're describing is actually a problem.

Exposure to super-high temps occurs in a small set of circumstances, all of which overlap with the destruction of the recording device and the cessation of incoming data. So we only need the same 1.2GB (or whatever) of high-temperature-tolerant storage.

The 25 hour storage can be on normal flash, as if we're more than 2 hours past the incident and data is continuing to come in, then the incident of interest did not destroy the airplane, and the flash will have remained within its normal operating parameters.

1 comments

Multiple investigations in the past have recovered data from FDR and/or CVR after an extensive high-temperature fire. I do not think that FAA will give that requirement up.
Yes. As I said. The existing system can remain in place, with all of its existing high-temperature-tolerant components.

In addition to not giving up that requirement, we could also add a longer, not-heat-tolerant storage. If it gets destroyed in a fire, see the above paragraph. If there is an incident where the data is of interest and the aircraft is not destroyed in a fire, then this will maintain the data long after the above system has deleted it.

No one has advocated giving up the high temperate storage.