I don't know if this is material for the engineering board, the advanced tech board, or of enough general interest that it belongs here.
After several months of work, I've got my combination data-logger/timer to the point where I could tape it onto a plane and record data while flying. We managed three flights.
Flight #1 was on my #2 plane, which is suffering mysterious engine problems which the addition of much nitro could not cure. It was really soggy above 40 degrees or so, and when it lost all line tension in the vertical 8 I bailed.
For flight #2 we switched planes to my #1 plane. Aside from hitting my own wake in the square eights it was one of my best, ever. I wish I could bottle it and bring it out at the Regionals. Unfortunately, due to poor wire routing on my part, the power plug came undone as soon as the engine started.
Flight #3 went without a hitch technically, but the clouds rolled over the sun just as I took off, and the wind was going every which way. This disconcerted me to the point where I did one maneuver twice (for extra credit, look at the "whole flight" plot and see which one it is -- it's clearly there).
The idea is that you can look at a flight afterward and see details that may escape you when you're flying. I, for instance, just learned that I don't fly nearly as well as I thought I did. I also learned that I really want to put this thing into the plane of a real expert and see how they fly (so Walker, Resinger, Cox, etc. -- if you see me at the Tune Up or the Regionals with a roll of electrical tape and a furtive air, hide your airplanes).
Here's the results from the one good flight. The files are named after the maneuvers shown. And no, they're not in order.