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    Evaluation of Influence Factors on the Visual Inspection Performance of Aircraft Engine Blades (2021)

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    Type of Content
    Journal Article
    UC Permalink
    https://hdl.handle.net/10092/104974
    
    Publisher's DOI/URI
    http://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace9010018
    
    Publisher
    MDPI AG
    ISSN
    2226-4310
    Language
    en
    Collections
    • Engineering: Journal Articles [1636]
    Authors
    Aust J
    Pons, Dirk cc
    Mitrovic, Antonija cc
    show all
    Abstract

    Background—There are various influence factors that affect visual inspection of aircraft engine blades including type of inspection, defect type, severity level, blade perspective and background colour. The effect of those factors on the inspection performance was assessed. Method—The inspection accuracy of fifty industry practitioners was measured for 137 blade images, leading to N = 6850 observations. The data were statistically analysed to identify the significant factors. Subsequent evaluation of the eye tracking data provided additional insights into the inspection process. Results—Inspection accuracies in borescope inspections were significantly lower compared to piece-part inspection at 63.8% and 82.6%, respectively. Airfoil dents (19.0%), cracks (11.0%), and blockage (8.0%) were the most difficult defects to detect, while nicks (100.0%), tears (95.5%), and tip curls (89.0%) had the highest detection rates. The classification accuracy was lowest for airfoil dents (5.3%), burns (38.4%), and tears (44.9%), while coating loss (98.1%), nicks (90.0%), and blockage (87.5%) were most accurately classified. Defects of severity level S1 (72.0%) were more difficult to detect than increased severity levels S2 (92.8%) and S3 (99.0%). Moreover, visual perspectives perpendicular to the airfoil led to better inspection rates (up to 87.5%) than edge perspectives (51.0% to 66.5%). Background colour was not a significant factor. The eye tracking results of novices showed an unstructured search path, characterised by numerous fixations, leading to longer inspection times. Experts in contrast applied a systematic search strategy with focus on the edges, and showed a better defect discrimination ability. This observation was consistent across all stimuli, thus independent of the influence factors. Conclusions—Eye tracking identified the challenges of the inspection process and errors made. A revised inspection framework was proposed based on insights gained, and support the idea of an underlying mental model.

    Citation
    Aust J, Pons D, Mitrovic A (2021). Evaluation of Influence Factors on the Visual Inspection Performance of Aircraft Engine Blades. Aerospace. 9(1). 18-18.
    This citation is automatically generated and may be unreliable. Use as a guide only.
    Keywords
    visual inspection; influence factors; impact factors; gas turbine engine blades; defect detection; eye tracking; MRO; aviation; aircraft engine maintenance
    ANZSRC Fields of Research
    40 - Engineering::4001 - Aerospace engineering::400103 - Aircraft performance and flight control systems
    Rights
    All rights reserved unless otherwise stated
    http://hdl.handle.net/10092/17651

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    • Automated defect detection and decision-support in gas turbine blade inspection 

      Aust, Jonas; Shankland, Sam; Pons, Dirk; Mukundan, Ramakrishnan; Mitrovic, Antonija (MDPI AG, 2021)
      © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Background—In the field of aviation, maintenance and inspections of engines are vitally important in ensuring the safe functionality of fault-free aircrafts. There ...
    • Assessment of Aircraft Engine Blade Inspection Performance Using Attribute Agreement Analysis 

      Aust J; Pons, Dirk (MDPI AG, 2022)
      Background—Visual inspection is an important element of aircraft engine maintenance to assure flight safety. Predominantly performed by human operators, those maintenance activities are prone to human error. While false ...
    • Comparative Analysis of Human Operators and Advanced Technologies in the Visual Inspection of Aero Engine Blades 

      Aust J; Pons, Dirk (MDPI AG, 2022)
      Background—Aircraft inspection is crucial for safe flight operations and is predominantly performed by human operators, who are unreliable, inconsistent, subjective, and prone to err. Thus, advanced technologies offer the ...
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