MURFREESBORO — Students
in the MTSU Engineering Technology Experimental Vehicles Program took advantage
of a day away from the classroom and laboratory earlier this semester to visit
with Jeff Lane at the Lane Motor Museum in Nashville.
Lane has been exactly where the MTSU students find
themselves: preparing for the Society of Automotive Engineers’ Mini Baja and
SAE Formula competitions later this spring.
The visit also was a way for MTSU students to say thank you
to Lane, who is a financial supporter of the program and a huge fan of the
students’ hard work and success.
“Going to the Lane Motor Museum for the Experimental
Vehicles Program students is a chance for the students to show one of our
important donors what we have been working on,” said Robert Johnson, a senior
mechatronics engineering major and team member from Columbia, Tennessee.
“Though Mr. Lane is a Vanderbilt alumnus and former member
of its SAE Baja team, he has made it clear he wants the engineering community
outside of that to have the experience of working on an engineering design
project with the degree of recognition the SAE competitions provide,” Johnson
added.
Experimental Vehicles Program adviser Saeed Foroudastan led
the group on the trip along with Nicole Chitty, development director for the College
of Basic and Applied Sciences.
Lane and the museum have been a faithful donor to our
program since 2004, Chitty said, adding that with his support, the Baja SAE and
Formula SAE teams have been able to compete in their international competitions
each year.
“Mr. Lane realizes from his own experience the importance of
these hands-on activities for our students,” she added. “We are so grateful for
his continued investment in our students.”
Chitty said student projects teach students organization,
leadership and communication skills. They hauled current versions of the lunar
rover and Mini Baja to the museum for Lane to view.
“Because of the competitive nature of each of the events
MTSU engineering students participate in, they must use cutting-edge technology
and design methods in order to field the very best entry possible,” Chitty
said. “Often these projects serve as rolling test beds for the latest
innovations in various technical fields and are accompanied by a great deal of
research.”
The majority of Experimental Vehicles Program participants
come from mechatronics engineering, engineering technology and aerospace.
No comments:
Post a Comment