As the mining industry becomes increasingly automated, and vehicles become increasingly advanced, the need for condition monitoring and prognostics will continue to rise. This thesis explores data-driven methods that estimate the health of mining vehicles to accommodate those needs. We do so by utilizing available sensor signals, common on a large amount of mining vehicles, to make assessments of the current vehicle condition and tasks. The mining industry is characterized by small series of highly specialized vehicles, which affects the possibility to use more traditional prognostic solutions.
The resulting health information can be used both to aid in tasks such as maintenance planning, but also as an important input to decision making for the planning system, i.e. how to run the vehicle for minimum wear and damage, while maintaining other mission objectives.
The contributions include: a) A method to use operational data to estimate damage on the frame of a mine truck. This is done using system identification to find a model describing stresses in the structure with input from other sensors such as accelerometers, load sensors and pressure sensors. The estimated stress time signal is in turn used to calculate accumulated damage, and is shown to reveal interesting conclusions on driver behavior. b) A method to characterize the different driving tasks by using an accelerometer and a convolutional neural network. We show that the model is capable of classifying the vehicle task correctly in 96 % of the cases. And finally c), a system for underground road monitoring, where a quarter car model and a Kalman filter are used to generate an estimate of the road profile, while positioning the vehicle using inertial measurements and access point signal strength.