Abstract

In this study, a set of methods for the inspection of a working motor in real time was proposed. The aim was to determine if ball-bearing operation is normal or abnormal and to conduct an inspection in real time. The system consists of motor control and measurement systems. The motor control system provides a set fixed speed, and the measurement system uses an accelerometer to measure the vibration, and the collected signal data are sent to a PC for analysis. This paper gives the details of the decomposition of vibration signals, using discrete wavelet transform (DWT) and computation of the features. It includes the classification of the features after analysis. Two major methods are used for the diagnosis of malfunction, the support vector machines (SVM) and general regression neural networks (GRNN). For visualization and to input the signals for visualization, they were input into a convolutional neural network (CNN) for further classification, as well as for the comparison of performance and results. Unique experimental processes were established with a particular hardware combination, and a comparison with commonly used methods was made. The results can be used for the design of a real-time motor that bears a diagnostic and malfunction warning system. This research establishes its own experimental process, according to the hardware combination and comparison of commonly used methods in research; a design for a real-time diagnosis of motor malfunction, as well as an early warning system, can be built thereupon.

Highlights

  • Automated inspection is growing in order to keep pace with the rapid development of production technology

  • Some of the classified signal data collected in these experiments were used for training, and the rest were used as testing data for examining the accuracy of the classification

  • The classifiers selected for use were support vector machines (SVM) and general regression neural networks (GRNN)

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Summary

Introduction

Automated inspection is growing in order to keep pace with the rapid development of production technology This has become essential for precision machining and the proper control of product quality [1,2]. It is rather difficult to determine if a signal collected from an accelerometer, attached to a motor or machine, originates from normal behavior or an abnormality. This has resulted in much work being done on spectrum analysis as a major procedure for the assessment of the signals and to increase computational speed [7].

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