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Note to Editors: UA’s Formula
SAE team will demonstrate the car’s capabilities with a practice
session in the parking lot near Hackberry Lane, across from the
new Residence Hall Complex, Thursday, May 12 at 1 p.m.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – “Vroom, vroom” is the sound
20 University of Alabama Society of Automotive Engineers members
love to hear when they rev the engine of their Formula SAE car
in preparation for an international competition in Detroit, Mich.,
May 18-22.
The competition challenges Society of Automotive Engineers student
members to conceive, design, fabricate and compete with small formula-style
racing cars. The cars are built with a team effort over a one-year
period, and are taken to the annual competition for judging and
comparison with approximately 140 other vehicles from colleges
and universities around the world.
“This competition is a great opportunity for our students
to gain the experience needed to land their first job, and since
these students have worked many long hours to make this car a success,
I know they will do well at the competition,” said Dr. William
Sutton, professor and head of mechanical engineering, and faculty
adviser to the SAE student chapter.
“Each year a new car must be built for the competition,” said
Matt Moody, team leader and a senior majoring in mechanical engineering. “Having
the 2004 car has really helped us to see what improvements we can
make on the 2005 model.”
The students are to assume that a manufacturing firm has engaged
them to produce a prototype car for evaluation as a production
item. The intended sales market is the nonprofessional weekend
autocross racer. Therefore, the car must have high performance
in terms of its acceleration, braking, and handling qualities.
The car also must be low in cost, easy to maintain, and reliable.
The cars are judged in a series of static and dynamic events
including: technical inspection, cost, presentation, engineering
design, solo performance trials and high performance track endurance.
In 1837, UA became the first university in the state to offer
engineering classes and was one of the first five in the nation
to do so. Today, the College
of Engineering, with about 1,900 students and more than 95
faculty, is one of the three oldest continuously operating engineering
programs in the country and has been fully accredited since accreditation
standards were implemented in the 1930s.
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