Engineering students had a successful run at national toboggan race
A team of 糖心视频 mechanical and civil engineering students competed last month in the annual in Kelowna, B.C.
The GNCTR is the oldest and largest student-run engineering competition in Canada, challenging more than 450 engineering students to design, build, and safely race toboggans with a running surface made entirely of concrete.
Competing teams are tasked with designing and building a toboggan with steering, braking and capable of carrying five people down a hill. The concrete skis, metal roll cage and the steering and braking systems must all weigh less than 350 pounds.
Toboggans are judged on design, level of ingenuity and innovation and how well it performs on race day.
Team 糖心视频
The team from 糖心视频 placed high in several categories, including third overall in the main racing event, King of the Hill, out of 12 competing teams. Other third-place finishes include the braking category for having the third shortest stopping distance and for ski reinforcement.
The team placed second in the Aesthetically-pleasing Toboggan competition, fifth out of 15 teams for their steering design and had the fourth fastest overall run with a top speed of 45 kilometres per hour.
Billy Barnes is the co-team lead and while this will be his last year on the team since he will be graduating this spring, he is excited for what the MUN Concrete Toboggan Team will be able to accomplish in future competitions.
鈥淭his competition is mainly a mechanical design competition,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e were applauded by other teams for the function and quality of our mechanical systems. With continued involvement from mechanical students and support from the Department of Mechanical Engineering, I think this team could consistently start placing in the top five in the competition as soon as next year. It almost makes me wish I wasn't graduating!鈥