Creating this thread for discussion of the tool, announcements of updates to it, and sharing results at different tracks.
For those of you who have Model 3 or Y Performance cars with track mode, the car saves telemetry files and videos. In my spare time over the last few months I've written an application to visualize and analyze the telemetry alongside the video and shared it as open source, so it can be modified and extended. It's portable and has been tried on MacOS, Windows.
The viewer lives at: adrianco/rs-tesla-telemetry
I just recorded a video that shows how to get it onto your own machine, and what the current version can do. It comes with an example file, and the matching example video is on YouTube.
Install video:
Tool is open source, and is written in a language called R, that's used for statistical analysis. The language itself is free and open source, and the development tool RStudio is also a free download. It uses a UI toolkit called Shiny, so I called it the Shiny Tesla Telemetry Analyzer. It currently just runs locally on your system, so you can pull files off the USB stick at a track day, and view them on a laptop while working offline. The video integration depends on uploading the file to YouTube, so that is more useful for comparing sessions later.
For those of you who have Model 3 or Y Performance cars with track mode, the car saves telemetry files and videos. In my spare time over the last few months I've written an application to visualize and analyze the telemetry alongside the video and shared it as open source, so it can be modified and extended. It's portable and has been tried on MacOS, Windows.
The viewer lives at: adrianco/rs-tesla-telemetry
I just recorded a video that shows how to get it onto your own machine, and what the current version can do. It comes with an example file, and the matching example video is on YouTube.
Install video:
Tool is open source, and is written in a language called R, that's used for statistical analysis. The language itself is free and open source, and the development tool RStudio is also a free download. It uses a UI toolkit called Shiny, so I called it the Shiny Tesla Telemetry Analyzer. It currently just runs locally on your system, so you can pull files off the USB stick at a track day, and view them on a laptop while working offline. The video integration depends on uploading the file to YouTube, so that is more useful for comparing sessions later.