Abstract

Machine health monitoring of rotating mechanical systems is an important task in manufacturing engineering. In this paper, a system for analyzing and detecting mounting defects on a rotating test rig is developed. The test rig comprises a slender shaft with a central disc, supported symmetrically by oscillating ball bearings. The shaft is driven at constant speed (with tiny variations) through a timing belt. Faults, such as the translation of the central disc along the shaft, the disc eccentricity, and defects on the motor reducer position or timing belt mounting position, are imposed. Time and frequency domain features, extracted from the vibration signal, are used as predictors in fault detection. This task is modeled as a multi-class classification problem, where the classes correspond to eight health states: one healthy and seven faulty. Data analysis, using unsupervised and supervised algorithms, provides significant insights (relevance of features, correlation between features, classification difficulties, data visualization) into the initial dataset, a balanced one. The experiments are performed using classifiers from MATLAB and six feature sets. Quadratic SVM achieves the best performance: 99.18% accuracy for the set of all 41 features extracted from X and Y accelerometer axes, and 98.93% accuracy for the subset of the 18 most relevant features.

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