Abstract

Crack inspections of automotive engine components are usually conducted manually; this is often tedious, with a high degree of subjectivity and cost. Therefore, establishing a robust and efficient method will improve the accuracy and minimize the subjectivity of the inspection. This paper presents a robust approach towards crack classification, using transfer learning and fine-tuning to train a pre-trained ConvNet model. Two deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) approaches to training a crack classifier—namely, via (1) a Light ConvNet architecture from scratch, and (2) fined-tuned and transfer learning top layers of the ConvNet architectures of AlexNet, InceptionV3, and MobileNet—are investigated. Data augmentation was utilized to minimize over-fitting caused by an imbalanced and inadequate training sample. Data augmentation improved the accuracy index by 4%, 5%, 7%, and 4%, respectively, for the proposed four approaches. The transfer learning and fine-tuning approach achieved better recall and precision scores. The transfer learning approach using the fine-tuned features of MobileNet attained better classification accuracy and is thus proposed for the training of crack classifiers. Moreover, we employed an up-to-date YOLOv5s object detector with transfer learning to detect the crack region. We obtained a mean average precision (mAP) of 91.20% on the validation set, indicating that the model effectively distinguished diverse engine part cracks.

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