N.C. A&T Aero Design Team Tops in the United
States
Tiffany S. Jones
GREENSBORO, N.C. (May 2, 2018) – A team of seven North Carolina
Agricultural and Technical State University students traveled to Van
Nuys, Calif., recently to compete at the SAE International Aero
Design West competition. They returned home the best team in the
country. |
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NCA&T Aero Design Team Seniors : Video |
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“We have been going to these competitions for
the last 20 years, and this is the highest we have ever
placed,” said Dr. John Kizito, a professor of mechanical
engineering and the group’s advisor.
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“It was exciting, and I could not believe that we placed
that high. The students answered the call, I told them, ‘We
are going to the competition to win, not just to attend.’
They came out and won.” |
Comprised of Nathan
Blake, Jhalyn Davis, Simon Esau, Xinru Niu, Christopher
Plott, Jasmine Shaw and Chad Staples, the team – NC(AT)2 –
worked together to create and operate an aircraft. Their
work earned a No. 2 overall finish in the regular class –
the Elliott & Dorothy Green Overall Regular Class Award –
behind a team for Politechnika Poznanska in Poland, with
Universidad Aeronautica en Queretaro of Mexico, Ningxia
University of China, and Warsaw University of Technology in
Poland rounding out the top five. The SAE International
Aero Design competition is intended to give undergraduate
and graduate engineering students a real-life engineering
challenge. The competition provides exposure to the diverse
challenges faced by engineering in a real work environment.
The organization includes more than 128,000 engineers and
technical experts in aerospace, utomotive and
commercial-vehicle industries. This competition also gives
the College of Engineering the opportunity to benchmark
their students against other universities for accreditation
purposes and for the purposes of assessing themselves as a
program. |
“This shows that our students
perform as well as, and sometimes better than, their
counterparts at other institutions,” said Kizito. This
project served as a senior capstone project that began in
August and ended in April. During that time, the students
put in 40-60 hours per week on the aircraft. For the
second-place finish, the team received a silver medal, $750
in prize money and a plaque. The team also had the best 2D
drawing and received the bronze medal for the Highest
Payload Lifted in the regular class. In addition, the
organization will pay to ship the plane for next year’s
competition. |
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