Car engine quality control is fundamentally hindered by extremely high-dimensional, noisy, and imbalanced multi-sensor data. To overcome these challenges, this paper proposes an edge-deployable diagnostic and predictive framework. First, a Sparse Autoencoder (SAE) maps over 12,000 distributed manufacturing parameters into a robust latent space to filter instrumentation noise. Second, for defect classification, a Class-Specific Weighted Ensemble (CSWE) tackles extreme class imbalance by aggressively penalizing majority-class bias, improving defect interception recall by 7.72%. Third, for transient performance tracking, an Adaptive Regime-Switching Regression (ARSR) replaces manual phase selection with unsupervised regime routing to dynamically weight local experts, reducing relative prediction error by 12%. Rigorously validated across three diverse public datasets (NASA C-MAPSS, AI4I, SECOM) and a physical H4 engine assembly line, the framework achieves an ultra-low inference latency of 80±3 ms, practically reducing the engine rework rate by 7.2%.
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Xinyu Yang
Qianxi Zhang
Junjie Bao
Sensors
Chongqing University
Xinjiang University
Chongqing Science and Technology Commission
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Yang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69abc1b45af8044f7a4eaa2c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051651