Technions Formula Student Team participates in European competitions 21 August 2016

Technion’s Formula Student Team participates in European competitions

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    The team won 8th place out of 42 universities in the Formula competition in the Czech Republic, which took place on a wet course​
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    Technion’s Formula car, which competed in the combustion engine category Technion’s Formula car, which competed in the combustion engine category Copyright: Office of the Spokesperson, Technion
     
     
    ​(Communicated by the Technion Spokesperson)

    Technion’s fourth Student Formula team finished twice in the top ten in the Formula Student competitions held this summer in Europe. In the competition in Hungary, the team finished in 9th place (out of 34 universities) and in the Czech Republic in 8th place (out of 42). Ranking was based on a number of criteria, including business plan presentation, circling the track, a 22 km heat (endurance), driving in figure eights, fuel efficiency and acceleration to a distance of 75 meters.

    Technion’s Formula car, which competed in the combustion engine category, achieved especially good results in the acceleration heat, the 22 km heat and driving in figure eights - heats that were held on a wet course in the Czech competition.

    According to the team leader, student Evgeny Guy, “In both competitions the car performed as planned with no unusual problems. All in all, this was our most successful season to date, and we received warm compliments not only from the judges but also from other teams.”

    This year, the Formula team comprised 40 students from seven different faculties at the Technion, some of them longtime participants and some for the first time.

    “We started with an idea and sketches,” says Guy, “and we continued with creative solutions, major challenges, debates and experiments into the night - and slowly we saw the car take shape. The idea led to the design, including designing the tools that we used, and we ultimately reached the training and the competition stages. On the way we learned a lot of things. The main thing we learned is that there are no magic solutions in engineering.”

    Guy, who led the project, will step down in favor of graduate studies at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, and will hand over the keys to student David Diskin, also from the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering.