The project INNOVA team is ready to push the pedal for the medal.
Nearly a year after its hydrogen fuel cell-powered urban concept vehicle placed second in its category during the Shell Eco-marathon Americas 2023 regional competition at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the 海角社区 team is gearing up for another shot at the title. This year, Engineering Science students and advisors are confident their trip back to the Brickyard will yield even greater success and they鈥檒l punch themselves a ticket to the world driving championship in Britain.
The Shell Eco-marathon Americas 2024 regional competition will be held April 3-7 again in Indianapolis. The annual academic program 鈥渃hallenges talented students to design and build cars, considering technical and behavioral factors to achieve game-changing energy efficiency results,鈥 according to its .
The project INNOVA team includes 海角社区 students Ruby Armor, Franzine Bagalawis, Evan Baltz, Alivia Case, Alvin Munoz Cervantes, Katherine Cocar, Russell Cole, Joseph DeFazio, Odain Forrester, Liam Gundersen, Quentin Haines, Jake Hamburg, Paul Jacobs, Gabrielle Joella, Rob Kay, Nate Mayer, Joseph Morris, Val Pero, Evan Pickel, Thomas Quinn, Sabrina Turner, Josue-Guinto Veronica and Ian White.
High Hopes
Engineering Science Professor and project INNOVA faculty advisor William Brownlowe believes the design of this year鈥檚 vehicle is built to win.
鈥淭his is by far our lightest chassis. Our power train is more efficient. We鈥檙e also going to use a streamlined body made of carbon fiber,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e never attempted something like this before, but we have a good, talented team with skilled members this year with automotive experience.鈥
The project INNOVA team has sought to participate in the Shell competition since building a first-generation vehicle design in 2015. It actually qualified for the competition in 2017 in Detroit with a vehicle that weighed 320 pounds but didn鈥檛 make it past the vehicle inspection. Then again last year the team made it to the race with a slimmed down vehicle weighing 280 pounds.
The goal of last year鈥檚 team was to get through the rigorous inspections required he said, in order to race the car on the inside track of the famous racecourse.
鈥淭his year the goal is to win one of top slots to go to world driving championship in Britain,鈥 said Brownlowe. 鈥淲e think this vehicle will do that.鈥
The team spent the summer and fall completely redesigning the vehicle from scratch to make it lighter and more aerodynamic. Part of the funding for the team to purchase a new hydrogen fuel cell to power the car came from a grant from Lockheed Martin to the STEM Division to support student engagement and retention in STEM programs.
Entering the competition at a sleek 200 pounds, students are ready to compete against four-year institutions and high school academies from across North and South America. Twenty-three students have played a hand in building the fourth generation of the vehicle from scratch. About 12 will make the roughly eight-hour trek to Indiana to compete.
First-year Mechanical Engineering Science major Ruby Armor is this year鈥檚 project INNOVA team manager. The 19-year-old from Ambler said this year鈥檚 team is in a much better position to achieve success from where it was last year at this time.
鈥淲e started building from complete scratch and we鈥檝e gone way farther,鈥 she said. 鈥淟ast year we tested the car for the first time right before we left. This year we tested it before winter break. I expect good things out of this car.鈥
Mechanical Engineering Science major Tom Quinn, 24, of Royersford, said he鈥檚 optimistic given how well the test drives have gone so far.
鈥淲e just have to play our cards right,鈥 he said.
Mechanical Engineering Science major Sabrina Turner, 20, from Colmar, drove the vehicle last year and will drive again this year. She thinks the team has learned from last year鈥檚 competition and made the necessary adjustments.
鈥淲e know what we鈥檙e doing this year,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e did really well last year for not quite knowing what we were getting ourselves into last year.鈥
鈥淎s far as I can tell, yes, we do have big shoes to fill,鈥 said Russell Cole, 19, a Mechanical Engineering major, from Colmar, who is in charge of 3D printing many of the parts that will go on the vehicle, 鈥渂ut we鈥檝e come a long way from last year. Last year, just the frame alone was 60 pounds. This year I believe it鈥檚 about 20 pounds. So, we鈥檝e come a long way and I鈥檓 confident in the stuff I鈥檝e made.鈥
Real world experience
The project INNOVA team gives students real-world experience collaborating with individuals from diverse backgrounds and with different skillsets.
Team Technical Advisor Griff Francis said it mirrors what they鈥檒l experience in the working world very soon.
鈥淎s a career engineer, I think this duplicates what they鈥檒l see in many jobs,鈥 he said. 鈥淣obody鈥檚 working on their own. They鈥檙e working as a team. They鈥檙e working with a multidisciplined team, where you have mechanical engineers, electrical engineers, computer programmers. So, you鈥檙e working with people with different skills, and it always helps to know a little about what their skills are and not just in isolation. I think this duplicates real world environment.鈥
Katherine Cocar, a 20-year-old Mechanical Engineering Science major, who lives in Pottstown, is the logistics officer for the team. She鈥檚 been working to establish connections with area businesses and has handled the registration paperwork, so when the team arrives at the competition everything goes smoothly.
鈥淥ur team can accomplish so many things but if it doesn鈥檛 have the right resources or connections, it won鈥檛 go anywhere,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t can鈥檛 go anywhere without the fuel. So, I wanted to help and take that role.鈥
Electrical Engineering Science major Liam Gundersen, 20, of Gilbertsville, said he鈥檚 enjoying his first year on the team. He鈥檚 been working to install GPS into the vehicle that displays the speed of the car for the driver and a flow meter that communicates to the team how much hydrogen has been used.
Gundersen said he鈥檚 enjoying how he鈥檚 applying what he鈥檚 learning in the classroom to a real-world scenario.
鈥淚t gives me actual experience than just sitting in the classroom,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 seeing what you鈥檝e learned actually apply. It鈥檚 a lot different from seeing it in the classroom.鈥
Quentin Haines, 22, from Abington, a first-year Mechanical Engineering Science major, said he鈥檚 enjoyed the experience on the team because it鈥檚 allowed him to learn new skills from others. Tom Quinn, he said, has taught him to use the Computer Numerical Control machine.
鈥淚 love to see that,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 like to learn more about that. Meeting people and learning what they know. I love learning.鈥
Eighteen-year-old Jake Hamburg, of Eagleville, a first-year Electrical Engineering Science major, said he鈥檚 hoping to use what he鈥檚 learned at 海角社区 to transfer to Drexel University and earn a degree in Computer Engineering. He said he鈥檚 really enjoying his time on the INNOVA team because it鈥檚 unlike anything he鈥檚 done before as a student.
鈥淚n high school, in the electric car club, we took a 1969 Triumph Spitfire and converted it to electric,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut it was kind of like reverse engineering. We were taking stuff that was already there and adapting it to what we needed. What we鈥檙e doing here is just creating something from scratch, which I think is really cool.鈥
Opportunities to help the team extend beyond the STEM fields too. Francis said students from all educational backgrounds can contribute. From project management opportunities for Business Administration majors, to social media, logo design or simply taking notes during test drives, there鈥檚 a way for everyone to contribute.
鈥淭his type of project gives students the opportunity to go a little bit out of their comfort zone and do something they normally wouldn鈥檛 do,鈥 said Francis. 鈥淚f they鈥檙e up for it, here鈥檚 the opportunity to do it.鈥
Brownlowe said past students who鈥檝e worked on the INNOVA project have leveraged the experience to transfer to four-year institutions and later to find high paying jobs in their field.
鈥淚f I look at the team that went to Detroit,鈥 he said, 鈥渙ut of seven students, five used the experience to get their jobs. They used it to transfer to a four-year institution and to get their current job. Three work at Lockheed.鈥
Brownlowe appreciated the continued support the College has given the team each year.
鈥淲e have a great appreciation for mccc support of this project. We鈥檙e not a club. We鈥檙e not really a sports team. We鈥檙e a project. It鈥檚 an ongoing project with collaboration of industry support, college support, grant support from different organizations. We鈥檙e appreciative of all that.
鈥淎s long as we鈥檙e doing this, it serves the students and the institution and the community at large well.鈥
This year the project INNOVA team is determined to raise $25,000 for the vehicle. To support this effort, make a donation to the team鈥檚 or contact the 海角社区 Foundation at 215-641-6324 or by email.