The Challenge of Modern EOL Testing
In high-speed production environments like automotive assembly or home appliance manufacturing, mechanical defects often manifest as subtle acoustic anomalies. Conventional methods, relying on human ears or basic sound level meters are subjective, inconsistent, and unable to capture high-frequency signatures. The HERTZINNO HZ-FA-QC was engineered to eliminate these vulnerabilities through AI-driven sound recognition.
Integrated Intelligence: The HZ-FA-QC System
Unlike handheld devices, the HZ-FA-QC is a dedicated Acoustic Signature Analysis System designed for seamless integration into fully automated production lines. It acts as a digital gatekeeper, performing real-time diagnosis on 100% of manufactured units without slowing down the cycle time.
Key Technical Advantages for Manufacturers:
Acoustic Fingerprinting: The system creates a unique digital "fingerprint" for a perfect product. By analyzing frequency, energy, and harmonics, it detects even the slightest deviation from the "golden sample."
Millisecond Decision Making: Built for high-speed lines, the HZ-FA-QC processes complex acoustic data and returns a "Pass/Fail" signal in milliseconds, integrating directly with PLC and MES systems.
Wide-Band Detection: Capable of monitoring across a broad frequency spectrum, it identifies everything from low-frequency bearing friction to high-frequency ultrasonic leaks or electronic hums.
Environmental Noise Immunity: Utilizing advanced beamforming and noise-cancellation algorithms, the system can isolate the sound of the workpiece even in the middle of a noisy factory floor.
TOYOTA’s Automated Compressor Lines
The HZ-FA-QC has been successfully implemented in TOYOTA’s automated compressor production. By replacing manual listening stations with our automated acoustic sensors, the facility achieved 100% inspection coverage and a significant reduction in false-positive rates. This transition not only ensured zero-defect shipments but also provided valuable data for Predictive Maintenance, allowing engineers to identify upstream machine wear before it results in product failure.