|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
In class, off-roadMotivated engineering students take to the computer, the workshop - and the roadFor two demanding weeks, students "reverse engineer" a common cordless screwdriver, learning in this undoing process the function of the screwdriver's basic parts. In the ensuing several weeks, they work in teams of three or four to metamorphose the screwdrivers (with the help of a few additional parts and $40 worth of gears) into remote-control ATVs. Each ATV turns out to be a simple yet rugged, quick and powerful vehicle that can conquer a grueling obstacle course. To help build these tough little racers, students learn to use 3-D modeling software. With the software, the students generate "code," i.e., instructions and measurements, that is fed into a lathe at the machine shop to cut out custom pieces. The software, in effect, helps ensure that the builders have pieces that are accurately sized and shaped. As the finished vehicles take to the track, they compete in a range of capabilities, most notably power (towing a heavy trailer up a ramp) and maneuverability (driving through a "slalom" course made of beakers and funnels). After these feats and a few more - traversing over circuit-board "rubble," going through a tunnel, and other deeds of derring-do - the vehicles are judged, winners are announced, and students go on to other classes and other, somewhat less exciting, homework.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||