Your Keynetic device includes two approaches capable of distinguishing between production and stop states based on the vibration signal. They rely on two different configuration logics. You can choose whichever method best suits your needs.
Any moment of non-production is referred to as a stop.
By default, your Keynetic device uses a manual configuration method known as legacy, which already has an initial setup suited to simple vibration cases and which can be reconfigured.
Your device also allows you to use a largely automated configuration, known as next-generation or new-gen. The next-generation approach is the one we recommend you configure. It will soon become the default approach for any new device.
Next-generation / new-gen approach
The new-gen approach was designed to simplify configuration and improve detection robustness in both simple and complex vibration situations.
Instead of manually adjusting the settings, you record several vibration segments, then label them as production or stop, and your device automatically calculates the parameters that provide the best detection.
This approach is the simplest to configure, including for simple cases. It is also particularly useful when the vibration behavior is more atypical or more affected by various sources of noise.
Please refer to the following article to use this approach: Semi-automated stop detection configuration
Legacy approach
This approach relies on manual configuration of the algorithm. You analyze a vibration capture corresponding to production and stop moments, then adjust the detector's parameters yourself to achieve the expected detection.
This approach is best suited if you want to retain control over the detector's settings and finely manage its behavior. However, it remains suited to vibration cases where it is easy to visually distinguish between vibration due to production and vibration during a stop.
Please refer to the following article to use this approach: Manual stop detection configuration