糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students compete in university鈥檚 first human powered vehicle challenge
糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Systems Engineering students Hugh Benfer, left, Jason Reed, right, and Shelby Wingate, middle, competed in the Human Powered Vehicle Challenge in State College, Pennsylvania. Photo by Ben Krain.A team ofsystems engineering students at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock has gone where no 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students have gone before by participating in the Human Powered Vehicle Challenge.聽For their senior design and capstone project, Team Captain Hugh Benfer, Nathanael Menhinick, Cameron Palmer, Jason Reed, and Shelby Wingate designed and built the university鈥檚 first human powered vehicle. Dr. Jin Lee, professor of systems engineering, and Dr. Samer Yahya, visiting scholar of systems engineering, served as the team鈥檚 faculty advisors.Human-powered transport is often the only type of transportation available in underdeveloped parts of the world and is an increasingly viable form of sustainable transportation that is becoming more popular in urban areas. The challenge provides an opportunity for students to demonstrate sound engineering design principles in the development of sustainable transportation alternatives.鈥淎 human-powered vehicle is generally for commuting in a metropolitan area,鈥 said Benfer. 鈥淵ou find a way to have a more ecologically, environmentally, and economically way to commute in cities, which are filled with cars that pollute the air and take up much needed space. Human powered vehicles solve an old problem of metropolitan cities that have too many cars, crowded traffic, and little parking. As biking becomes more popular, human-powered vehicles will become more popular as people branch out and customize their experiences.鈥The team worked on the human-powered vehicle, which they dubbed the 鈥淭rojan Horsepower,鈥 during the 2017-18 academic year. Riders sit in the three-wheeled vehicle in a recumbent-bike position.鈥淥ur human-powered vehicle is pure engineering might, steel, and zip ties. It has an extremely robust steel roll bar, so that in the event of a crash, the roll bar protects the rider and the rider will not touch the ground,鈥 Benfer said. 鈥淲e also used aerodynamic fairing, which is something that will block the wind and allows the air to move more smoothly around your body. It makes the vehicle easier to pedal. You can cut through the wind like a knife.鈥The students had the opportunity to test their vehicle in the at Pennsylvania State University April 13-15.聽
Hugh Benfer drives Trojan Horsepower as teammates Jason Reed and Shelby Wingate watch. Photo by Ben Krain.
The Department of Systems Engineering even recognized the contributions of the students鈥 parents. Darin Reed, father of Jason Reed, received a special award, 鈥淥utstanding Father of the Year,鈥 at the Donaghey College of Engineering and Information Technology鈥檚 2018 awards ceremony for driving the team the 16-hour trek from Little Rock to Pennsylvania and back so they could participate in the competition. The event consisted of safety tests to ensure the vehicle鈥檚 sound design, a drag race, and an endurance race in which teams competed to complete the most laps possible during a 2.5 hour race. Wingate placed 13th in the women鈥檚 drag race, while Benfer placed 18th in the men鈥檚 drag race. In the endurance race, Benfer, Palmer, Reed, and Wingate placed 13th after completing 26 total laps.鈥淭here are obstacles like stop signs, speed bumps, and tight turns,鈥 Benfer said. 鈥淚t puts your vehicle to the test. The rumble strip is going to destroy your vehicle if anything is loose. That is what happened to us. We had to go to the pit to keep our vehicle together. It鈥檚 basically the ultimate stress test for the vehicles, and some vehicles were destroyed because the design was not robust enough. The disk brake snapped in the middle, so we had to do an emergency repair and come up with an engineering solution, which was to take the brake off and race with one brake for most of the race. Our legs were like jelly afterwards.鈥糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock placed 16th out of 47 teams for the overall competition, and a new team of students will take up the challenge of building a human-powered vehicle next year, only this time they will not be starting from scratch. The systems engineering department may eventually start a student organization dedicated to building human-powered vehicles.鈥淚t was really cool to apply our degree to a tangible product that we made,鈥 Benfer said. 鈥淚t was cool to use what we have learned from the mechanical engineering department and use it and stress test it and watch it fall apart and fix it. We were able to use the skills we learned here at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock in a real-world setting.鈥