AX3L
Automotive
- Jun 22, 2013
- 37
Hi everyone!
As a newly graduated control system and automation engineer I got a bit of a shock when I discovered that the automatic fault detection at the company I work at is non existing. Sure, they measure vibrations once in a while manually to detect bearing fault and imbalances but considering how cheap and powerful microchips and PLCs are today I can't see why they don't do it automatically all the time. And since I've not gotten any good answers I'm curious about how it looks at the industry today. Is automated fault detection just something they teach in school but that's to expensive to implement in real life today or is just my company 10 years behind? It's a large truck manufacturer by the way, so there are a lot of turning, milling and drilling going on and it's not a small 10 machine business.
Some of your inputs and thoughts about this subject would be deeply appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Axel
As a newly graduated control system and automation engineer I got a bit of a shock when I discovered that the automatic fault detection at the company I work at is non existing. Sure, they measure vibrations once in a while manually to detect bearing fault and imbalances but considering how cheap and powerful microchips and PLCs are today I can't see why they don't do it automatically all the time. And since I've not gotten any good answers I'm curious about how it looks at the industry today. Is automated fault detection just something they teach in school but that's to expensive to implement in real life today or is just my company 10 years behind? It's a large truck manufacturer by the way, so there are a lot of turning, milling and drilling going on and it's not a small 10 machine business.
Some of your inputs and thoughts about this subject would be deeply appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Axel