Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Inaugural HPVC India Event is a Resounding Success

Inaugural HPVC India Event is a Resounding Success Inaugural HPVC India Event is a Resounding Success Inaugural HPVC India Event is a Resounding SuccessPedocker, the entry from the Indian School of Mines in Dhanbad (far left), leads the pack at the HPVC India endurance vorstellung. The team placed third in that race, but was the overall winner of the three-day competition. Photo by Michael Moorhead, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. The first ASME Human Powered Vehicle Challenge (HPVC) to be held in India was an unqualified success, with more than 400 students and 36 teams from more than 30 universities turning out for the competition. For more than 30 years, the ASME HPVC program has provided engineering students with the opportunity to demonstrate their skills at applying sound engineering design principles while developing sustainable and practical transportation alternatives. The HPVC India event, which took place Jan. 17-19, 2014, at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Delhi, consisted of a design evaluation on Friday, followed by a double-elimination drag race speed competition on Saturday and two-and-a-half hour endurance event on Sunday. HPVC India was co-hosted by Delhi Technological University. At the end of the three-day competition, Pedocker, the entry from the Indian School of Mines in Dhanbad, emerged as the overall winner. The team placed second in the speed event, third in the endurance event, and fourth in the design category. Rajarambapu Institute of Technologys entry, ArcK, took second place overall, placing first in the endurance event, third in the speed event, and sixth in design. Jamia Millia Islamias Flare, the winner of speed event, finished third overall. ArcK, Rajarambapu Institute of Technologys entry, took third place overall at HPVC India. Photo by Michael Moorhead, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. Michael Moorhead, Chair of the Human Powered Vehicle Challenge Committee and Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, characterized the inaugural HPVC India as a wildy successful event that far exceeded his expectations. When we originally started we thought wed call it a success if it had 10 or 12 teams that participated, because we never know what an international event is going to look like, said Dr. Moorhead, who attended the competition with six students from his institutes human powered vehicle team. So when we had such great participation, that was the first indicator of success for us. But then getting through the weekend and actually executing the event just as well as we do in the U.S. was just fantastic. It was just much better than I ever would have expected it to be. Human Powered Vehicle Challenge Committee Chair Michael Moorhead (second from left) reviews the rules of the competition with the HPVC India student participants. Photo by Crystal Hurtle, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. According to Moorhe ad, the HPVC Committee has been interested in establishing an event in India for the past several years. Historically there have been a few teams from India that have tried to come to the United States for the U.S.-based HPVC events, and its always a real challenge, he said. Most of their effort is directed at the logistics of actually getting over here, and most of their money is focused on air fare and lodging. And it hurts them in the long run. Weve been saying for years that wed like to have an event in India, but we needed to find a cooperative host. That happened this year with IIT Delhi. Moorhead, who is also the faculty advisor for the Rose-Hulman HPVC team, was especially impressed with IIT Delhis commitment to the project. They did a phenomenal job, he said. It was one of the best-organized events in the U.S. or elsewhere that weve ever seen. They clearly wanted to put on an excellent event. The competition in India was the first of four HPVC events that will take place t his year. HPVC East will be held April 11-13, 2014, in Orlando, Fla. HPVC West will take place in San Jose, Calif., from April 25-27, 2014. An HPVC Latin America event is also planned for Mexico City in October. For more information on the HPVC India Event, and complete results from the competition, visit www.hpvcindia.in/results.html. To learn more about the HPVC program, visit www.asme.org/events/competitions/human-powered-vehicle-challenge-(hpvc).

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