Sunday, November 17, 2019
ASME E-Fest South America Launches Successfully
ASME E-Fest South America Launches Successfully ASME E-Fest South America Launches Successfully ASME E-Fest South America Launches Successfully The team from Universidad de los Andes, Bogota, was named the overall winner of the ASME Human Powered Vehicle Challenge (HPVC) at ASME E-Fest South America in Brazil. The team placed first in the design category, the menâs and womenâs speed races, and the endurance event. ASMEs inaugural Engineering Festival (E-Fest) in South America, which was held July 27 to 29 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, marked another high point for the E-Fest program, drawing more than 500 participants from across South America and Mexico. The three-day ASME E-Fest South America, which was held at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), encompassed a variety of engaging activities, including a daily internship fair, a student leadership training session, tours of the UFRJ campus, networking opportunities, a keynote session featuring speakers from Stratasys and Hyperloop, presentations from industry leaders such as National Instruments, ANSYS and Altair, as well as several student competitions. A team of students from Universidad de los Andes, Bogota, was the big winner at one of those competitions, the ASME Human Powered Vehicle Challenge (HPVC). The team, which was named the overall winner of the three-day competition, also took top honors in each of the competitions main categories: the mens and womens speed events, the endurance race, and the design category. (Left to right) Universidad del Zulia team members Ricardo Villarreal, Javier Vargas, Andree Picon and Leonardo Gonzalez were recognized for special achievement in overcoming obstacles at the E-Fest South America awards ceremony. The team took second place overall during the HPVC at E-Fest South America. While Universidad de los Andes dominance during the HPVC in Brazil was hard to ignore, perhaps the biggest story at the E-Fest South America HPVC involved the team that placed second overall in the competition: Universidad del Zulia (LUZ). The team, which hails from Maracaibo, Venezuela, had the odds stacked against them just trying to make it to the E-Fest. The students, who had to start a fundraising campaign to participate in the competition, spent five days traveling to Rio de Janeiro, taking several buses, a couple of taxis, and a plane in order to reach the event. They even disassembled their bicycle and packed the pieces in their suitcases to save the expense of shipping it to the competition. Their spirit and determination paid off, though. In addition to finishing second overall, the team placed second in the design and womens speed events and third in the mens speed race. The teams members were also recognized for their efforts at the E-Fest South America awards ceremony. It was very important for us to come here because we wanted to show everybody, the entire world, that we could do it, said Leonardo Gonzalez, a member of the LUZ team, adding that he hopes their story encourages students from other universities around the world to participate in the HPVC. It was a great experience, he said. The team from Tecnolgico Nacional de Mxico en Celaya placed third overall, second in the menâs speed event, and third in the womenâs speed event and the design category at the HPVC in Rio de Janeiro. The E-Fests host university, UFRJ, fared well in two other competitions that were held during E-Fest South America, the Old Guard Oral Presentation and Old Guard Poster Competitions. Fernanda Prazeres, a student from the university, received one of two $750 first-place prizes at the Old Guard Oral Presentation Competition. Carlos Eduardo Mendes Vieira de Carvalho from UFRJ took home the Oral Presentation Competitions $400 second prize as well as the $100 technical prize. Meanwhile, five students from the university Bruno Bernhardt, Pedro Mattos da Silva, Lucas Lessa, Mateus Rodrigues and Everton Vieira shared the $600 top prize at the Old Guard Poster Competition. Two students from Escuela Politecnica Nacional in Ecuador also impressed the judges at the Old Guard Oral Presentation Competition at E-Fest South America. Marco Alejandro Carrion Salazar was named the winner of one of the competitions first-prize awards, receiving $750, while a second student from the university, Andrea Alexandra Suntaxi, placed second in the competition and won the prize in the technical category. She won a total of $500. E-Fest South America offered students a wealth of learning opportunities, such as seminars on 3D printing and fluid dynamics simulation. Three students were named the top prize winners at another student contest at the E-Fest, the IAM3D Impromptu CAD Battle. Victor Diz finished first in the competition, winning the $250 first prize. Fernando Garcia, a student from UFRJ, placed second and took home the $150 second prize. Mateus Martins rounded out the top three, receiving the $75 third prize. There was much more to ASME E-Fest South America than student competitions, however. The E-Fest program in Brazil offered students a variety of training and skills-development opportunities as well. The events three-day schedule was packed with activities such as ASME Standards Certification mini-courses, a session focusing on petroleum company Petrobras offshore wind energy initiatives, a workshop on engineering and data acquisition sponsored by National Instruments, a session on the digital revolution in Industry 4.0 sponsored by Radix, a session on fluid dynamics simulation hosted by ANSYS, a 3D printing seminar offered by Maker Factory, and a session exploring geometric-based topological optimization and analysis that was sponsored by Altair. A representative from Maker Factory shares knowledge with students at the exhibits area at E-Fest South America. Erik Larson, who led the session sponsored by Altair, was extremely impressed by the enthusiasm of the students attending E-Fest South America. Larson, a training manager at Altair who had previously participated in E-Fests in the United States, observed that while students in the U.S. tend to be used to people from industry talking to them at student conferences like these, down here, the students are so much more engaged because Im guessing I dont think they get this kind of attention from organizations like ASME or Siemens or Altair or GrabCAD. They dont see that, so theyre even more engaged down here. I think thats really cool. For more information on the ASME E-Fest program, visit https://efests.asme.org.
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