A new procedure for diagnosing damage to the fuel injection system of marine engines, along with vibration acceleration signal symptoms, is explored with a related built, developed, and tested measuring system. This work fills an important gap given the current lack of a scientific solution to this problem. A vibration acceleration signal sensor, mounted on a holder elaborated on by the authors, is positioned on the injection pipe between the injection pump and the injector. The output signals from the sensor are sent to an acquisition and analysis system, which is used for processing the signals in the time, amplitude, frequency, and time–frequency domains. Experimental choices, using multiple parameters for a given signal analysis field, are based on the location of the optimal sensor, the direction of the sensor mounting, and the selection of a cumulative diagnostic symptom. The vibration acceleration signals recorded along the injection pipe are found to have the strongest magnitude. This article compares diagnostic values from these signals with previously determined upper and lower limits. As a result, the tested fuel injection system is classified as either able or disabled, using unparalleled tolerance ranges given for both the upper and lower limits. The values of the limits are determined based on the average value for an ability state plus or minus three times the standard error of this mean, which has not been reported in the literature previously. Multiple regression models are developed that relate identified symptoms to the state features of the fuel injection system. In addition, artificial neural networks and machine learning are used to detect developing damage. The probability of correctly classifying the states of the diagnostic parameters is 0.467, alongside a diagnostic accuracy of ≤±4%, with the network correctly classifying the state when the testing accuracy is at least 70.0%.
Monieta et al. (Sun,) studied this question.