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Robot Race
July/August 2008
Photograph ©Julie Brown
The final project of
Mechanical Engineering 185 always involves a little competition. This year, the
21 students each received four small motors, a sheet of aluminum, a solar
panel, and a bagful of nuts, bolts, and wheels, and were told to design and
build a robot vehicle. The craft had to be able to capture and convert the
light from a 1000-watt stage lamp into enough power to travel forward for 10
feet, pick up a small wooden block, and carry it back to the starting line.

It was a nerve-racking and
high-stakes game. On May 1 in Davies Auditorium, the robots were racing against
the clock—the trip had to be completed within two and a half minutes—and each
other. And the students behind the winning robots would get special consideration,
gradewise.
Here, Phil Clopton '08
(foreground), the designated driver for Alice Buttrick '10, bests Carl Zhou
(far left), a North Haven high school student taking the class, while Daniel
Jimenez '09 (center) and Hannah Waldenberger '11 watch.
In the end, after eight
rounds of double-elimination racing, Ryan Carlisle '11 won, his vehicle
covering the distance in times as fast as 88 seconds. Did the losers fail the
course? No, says David LaVan, assistant professor of mechanical engineering.
"If you can analyze well what went wrong, you're OK.”  |
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