Strong Finish: Student engineers design award-winning vehicle

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Lafayette to Destin, Fla., on a single gallon of gas? That鈥檚 how far a gas-sipping car designed and built by 青青草视频 mechanical engineering seniors can travel.

The Cajun Eco-car achieved the third-best fuel economy in its class 鈥 375 mpg 鈥 during the Shell Eco-marathon Americas鈥 competition in April. The contest challenges high school and college teams to see whose vehicle can go the farthest on the least amount of fuel.

Competing cars, each with a 250-milliliter gas tank, were driven on a six-mile course in downtown Houston. Then, fuel consumption was measured and miles per gallon were calculated.

This is the first time a UL Lafayette team entered the contest.

There are two vehicle classes: prototype and urban concept. Students concentrate on fuel efficiency for the prototype class. They build more practical vehicles for the urban concept class. Each class is further divided into fuel types, such as gasoline, diesel, ethanol and solar. The Cajun Eco-car uses gasoline.

UL Lafayette鈥檚 team excelled in design competition, earning a special prize, the Urban Concept Design Award. Competing schools included Penn State, Purdue and Rice.

The University鈥檚 220-pound, single-seat coupe looks like
a cross between a dragster and a go-kart, yet it鈥檚 designed for the road. To compete in the urban concept class, a car must meet specific criteria. For example, it must have four wheels, side mirrors, lights, turn signals, windshield wipers and luggage space. The driver鈥檚 compartment must also meet space dimensions.

The University鈥檚 team also won the overall Communication Award for its promotion of the project. The Urban Concept Design Award and the Communication Award each had a $2,000 prize.

Dr. William Emblom, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at UL Lafayette and the team鈥檚 advisor, said the students applied engineering principles they studied in class.

鈥淭heir efforts on the engineering and design will give them the tools to be successful in the workplace and are what truly give prestige to the UL Lafayette mechanical engineering program,鈥 Emblom said.

Team captain Clint Manuel said UL Lafayette students chose to build an urban concept car because it is more complex than a prototype vehicle. 鈥淲e wanted to go with something more practical and something more challenging,鈥 he said.

The team raised about $15,000 in cash, and another $10,000 to $15,000 in non-cash donations, such as materials, shop time and expertise. That was enough to cover the entire cost of the project.

The team was composed of mechanical engineering seniors Manuel, David Stelly, Kyle Mouton, Tyler Cook, Joseph Lanclos, Jed Viator, Brocke Marrette, Zac Lancon and Rilee Dupuis. Three other members, Caleb Voisin, David Mabile and Keith St. Germain, graduated in December 2012. Dupuis, who plans to graduate in December, is the only returning member.

Emblom said the students who competed in the 2012 Shell Eco-marathon for the first time built a strong foundation for their successors.

鈥淥ne of the great things about the project was that they had to write an engineering report documenting their efforts and then, based upon the performance of the vehicle, describe what changes they would make to it to improve the vehicle鈥檚 performance. This is the essence of engineering. The next team will have a distinct advantage because they will have inherited a knowledge base that this team established.鈥