|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A group of University of Alabama mechanical
engineering students will participate in NASAs ninth annual
Great Moonbuggy Race at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center
in Huntsville on Saturday, April 13.
Sixty-eight teams, representing high schools and colleges across
the country, will race over a lunar-like terrain in human-powered
vehicles, which they have designed and built. Students from UAs
mechanical engineering Design 1 class, the first of
a two-course, senior-level design series, will represent the UA
at the race.
Dr. Steve Shepard, assistant professor of mechanical engineering
and moonbuggy team faculty advisor, recently coordinated a preliminary
race on campus to determine the two teams from the class that would
advance to Huntsville.
Chosen to represent UA were: Team One-Scot Donald of Coker, Todd
Hollingsworth of Fayette, Alan McRee of Hoover, Daphne Messer of
Wetumpka, Destin Sandlin of Decatur and Marcus Taylor of Fayette;
and Team Two-Brian Chalfont of Tuscaloosa, Sam Davis of Tuscaloosa,
Carsten Haustein of Tuscaloosa, T. Jay Moore of Parrish and Stormy
Speer of Northport.
Each team was responsible for designing a vehicle that occupies
a space no more than 4 feet by 4 feet by 4 feet before its
assembly, to match the space available for transport in a rocket.
Prior to the race, the vehicle must be carried 20 feet by the two
drivers and then assembled for use. Two team members-one male and
one female-then power and drive their vehicle over the half-mile
obstacle course of simulated moonscape terrain. Winners will be
determined by the fastest vehicle-assembly time and the fastest
time for traveling through the course.
Results and photos will be posted on the NASA Marshall Center Web
site at www.msfc.nasa.gov/news
shortly after the competition concludes, in the early evening of
April 13.
|