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Engineers Ride Crash聽Course to Victory

Engineers Ride Crash聽Course to Victory

黑料百科 engineering鈥檚 fifth annual remote-control (RC) car showdown was packed with crashes, flips, stalls, missed turns鈥攁nd, for the first time, a three鈥慶ar championship race. When then dust finally settled, the team of Ben Mandani and Isaac Silva, who launched their car, named NESI, more than five feet off a ramp to win a one-jump playoff, hoisted championship trophies Dec. 5 on Kerrwood Lawn.

NESI Takes Flight
NESI launches to victory

鈥淭his has been a long journey, putting bags of parts together to eventually create a car we could be proud of,鈥 Mandani said. 鈥淭his is an accumulation of all our hard work over the semester from every little piece built from the ground up into a cohesive machine.鈥

鈥淚t's been a great journey, because NESI isn't just an RC car that's here to compete, she鈥檚 a teammate,鈥 Silva said. 鈥淭his has been a story of our growth, our teamwork and overall, our learning concepts, engineering and problem solving.鈥

In explaining their victory, the two described how they utilized engineering concepts such as fatigue loading to reinforce certain parts of their car, such as the shocks, to minimize vibration and maximize acceleration.

Ben Mandani, president Gayle D. Beebe, Isaac Silva and director Dan Jensen
Ben Mandani, president Gayle D. Beebe, Isaac Silva and director Dan Jensen

Part of the overall competition included a 90-second elevator pitch where each team describes the key engineering lessons they learned making their 500-piece RC car.

鈥淗opefully, you're thinking these students don't communicate like engineers, they communicate like human beings,鈥 said Dan Jensen, Allder professor and director of 黑料百科鈥檚 engineering program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so important for them professionally to be able to communicate well, and 黑料百科鈥檚 curriculum does a wonderful job of providing that foundational skill set that makes them well-rounded people 鈥 in addition to obviously all the geeky stuff that we do as engineers.鈥

President Gayle D. Beebe, who announced the winners of the competition, congratulated the competitors and donated $2,500 to the engineering program.