%0 Conference Proceedings %T Efficacy of Some Primary Discriminant Functions in Diagnosing Planetary Gearboxes %+ Inst. of Computer Science %+ Wroclaw School of Applied Informatics %+ Diagnostics and Vibro-Acoustics Science Laboratory %+ Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Group %A Bartkowiak, Anna %A Zimroz, Radoslaw %Z Part 2: Invited Paper %< avec comité de lecture %( Lecture Notes in Computer Science %B 12th International Conference on Information Systems and Industrial Management (CISIM) %C Krakow, Poland %Y Khalid Saeed %Y Rituparna Chaki %Y Agostino Cortesi %Y Sławomir Wierzchoń %I Springer %3 Computer Information Systems and Industrial Management %V LNCS-8104 %P 24-35 %8 2013-09-25 %D 2013 %R 10.1007/978-3-642-40925-7_3 %K nonlinearity %K gearbox diagnostics %K condition monitoring %K discriminant analysis %K healthy state %K faulty state %K kernels %Z Computer Science [cs] %Z Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesConference papers %X We consider the efficiency of some primary discriminant functions applied in planetary gearbox diagnostics. Real data for planetary gearboxes mounted in bucket wheel excavators working in field condition are elaborated. The aim is to perform condition monitoring (faulty or healthy) of such devices. The raw recorded data (vibration series emitted by the device) were first segmented and transformed to frequency domain using power spectra densities (PSD). Next, 15 variables denoting amplitudes of derived spectra were extracted. This yielded two data matrices A and B of size 1232×15, and 951×15, representing the faulty and the healthy device appropriately. The data are non-Gaussian and the covariances in both groups differ significantly.Now, using Fisher’s discriminant criterion and the kernel methodology, we construct from a learning sample (counting only 600 items) a discriminant function able to provide a discriminant score for distinguishing between the healthy and faulty state of a gearbox. The function proved to be very effective: Both for the learning and the testing data samples (600 and 1483 data vectors respectively) we got 100% correct assignments to the ’faulty’ and ’healthy’ class, with a conspicuous margin between the two classes. The results are visualized in a 2D plane. %G English %Z TC 8 %2 https://inria.hal.science/hal-01496088/document %2 https://inria.hal.science/hal-01496088/file/978-3-642-40925-7_3_Chapter.pdf %L hal-01496088 %U https://inria.hal.science/hal-01496088 %~ SHS %~ IFIP-LNCS %~ IFIP %~ IFIP-TC %~ IFIP-TC8 %~ IFIP-CISIM %~ IFIP-LNCS-8104