Results of Human
Powered Vehicle Challenge
CORVALLIS, Ore.
California Polytechnic Institute in San Luis Obisco, Calif., won
the overall single-rider category of Human Powered Vehicle Challenge
held this weekend at Oregon State University.
Other winners included:
Overall:
-Multi-rider category: University of Nevada-Las Vegas.
-Utility category: LeTourneau University of Longview, Texas.
Design:
-Single-rider category:
Michigan Technological University.
-Multi-rider category: University of Nevada-Las Vegas.
-Utility category: LeTourneau University.
From The Associated Press State & Local Wire
April 25, 2004, Sunday, BC cycle
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Students put
brains, muscles to the test in human-powered vehicle contest
By SARAH LINN, Associated Press Writer, CORVALLIS, Ore.
Bouncing up and down in the bright April sunshine, Lianne
Miller couldn't wait to climb into a windowless, fiberglass
shell and rocket down the main commercial street of this small college
town. "It's a rush," the 22-year-old mechanical engineering
student said. "It's like riding inside a helmet." Miller,
a senior at Michigan Technological University,
was one of 250 or so college students participating in this weekend's
Human Powered Vehicle Challenge at Oregon State University. The
West Coast event, sponsored by the American Society of Mechanical
Engineers, i s aimed at encouraging creativity, airing new ideas,
and giving students hands-on experience with designing, building
and showing off a functional craft. The contest began at the University
of California at Davis 21 years ago. A separate contest is held
for the East Coast.
Students spend as much as a year working on the human-powered vehicles.
The sleek, futuristic crafts feature one or more riders in a variety
of positions: sitting forward, lying on their back or stomach, or
seated back-to-back tandem style. Safety measures such as harnesses
and roll bars are a must, as are some sort of shield or cover and
any combination of wheels. The 20-person team at Michigan
Tech spent seven months - and about $30,000 in school and
corporate donations - creating their 10-foot-long yellow bullet-shaped
vehicle. It's called BIFOB, or "Brains in Front of Butts,"
a name they say describes both the rider's position and the project's
philosophy. BIFOB is a far cry from the classic, upright bicycle.
Instead of pedaling, the prone rider rest on their stomachs and
pump the gears back and forth - piston-like - with feet. Four video
cameras in the fully enclosed craft's hood and nose beam images
to four screens in front of the rider's face for navigation. The
vehicle won the Challenge's overall design competition. "We
all worked so hard on this thing," Miller said. "We really
poured our lives into it."
Participants say they relish the chance to take ideas from the
drawing board to the pavement. "Practical application of stuff
we learn in class is in short supply," said David Wood, 21,
a junior studying mechanical engineering at the State University
of New York at Buffalo. "So we appreciate the chance to do
it on the university's dollar." Participation in the Challenge
represents a resume boost for engineering students, said contest
judge Coleman Johnson, a retired mechanical engineer. He worked
as a recruiter at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in
Livermore, Calif. "These are the kinds of people we like: aggressive,
innovative, able to work with a team," Johnson said. "That
energy is just infectious. That's what does it for me." The
contest races test speed, utility and endurance. The first features
a 328-yard headlong dash for the finish, with hay bales on the sidelines
to blunt the impact of crashes. The top speed during the race was
43 mph. Next, drivers prove the usefulness of their vehicles in
everyday life by navigating a twisting, curving one-kilometer course
to pick up and deliver mock "groceries" - represented
by a 12-pack of soda. And in the endurance race, all 22 teams line
up for a 65-kilometer ( 4 0 . 4 - m i l e ) marathon that includes
relay riders and pit stops. "We're practicing to streamline
processes in the pit, trying to make our responses faster,"
said Jenna Kraft, 22, a senior in mechanical engineering at Seattle
University. Even with their steel alloy frames and fiberglass shields,
the vehicles tend to be accident- prone. Saturday's speed race saw
about a dozen crashes. Spectators cheered the competitors, pushing
their bikes and strollers along the course. "It's different
than a bike. It's cool and unique and shows some creativity,"
said Corvallis resident Erik Suring, seated outside the Interzone
coffee shop with two friends.
They watched the speed event from a table on the sidewalk, alternately
"oohing" and cringing as a vehicle wobbled out of control.
"You can see the terror on their faces," Holly Truemper
said with a chuckle.
From The Associated Press State & Local Wire
April 25, 2004, Sunday, BC cycle
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