A common assumption made in the performance assessment of a turbine engine for aircraft propulsion consists in restricting the data processing to steady-state data. This especially holds for onboard performance monitoring of a commercial aircraft which spends up to 90% of the time in cruise flight where such conditions are satisfied. The present contribution is intended to investigate the ability of a diagnosis method to process unsteady data rather than steady-state data. The aim of this unsteady approach is to strongly reduce the time and the efforts spent to obtain a reliable diagnosis. In order to assess the improvements in terms of diagnosis efficiency and engine operability, the resulting diagnostic method is tested for different degradations that can be expected on commercial turbofans. The results are also compared to those obtained from cruise flight steady-state data in order to balance the two approaches.

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