Eureka
Home Advertise Magazine Events Eureka TV Directory
  


Subscribe

Autodesk supports academic excellence at Formula Student
10/08/2009 Email to a friend   Comment on this article
CAD/CAM/CAE software giant Autodesk says it is helping to promote careers and excellence in engineering by sponsoring Formula Student 2009.

Autodesk supports academic excellence at Formula StudentThe largest student motorsport event in Europe, this year's race featured some of the best engineering students across the world competing in a single- seater car designed and built from scratch.

At this year's event, Autodesk presented three awards: Autodesk 'Most effective/Innovative design in engineering', which was won by the Imperial College London; Autodesk 'Class 1 design', which went to the TU Delft, Netherlands, team; and Autodesk 'Class 1 (200)' (for further development of Class 1 cars, which was won by the TU Munich.

During the event, Mike Jelinek, one of Autodesk's Alias designers, offered to use the solution to redesign the body shells of participants' Formula Student Cars. Alias provides for visualisation and analysis of the entire shape-definition process from concept sketching and modelling to Class-A surfacing.

Paolo Zambon, Autodesk EMEA education marketing manager, says: "Autodesk is proud to support young engineering talent both through its sponsorship of Formula Student and its provision of free software, support services and specialised training resources to participants.

"Formula Student is a fantastic career opportunity that allows students to combine first-class hands-on practical experience with academic study and equips them with a range of skills they can use to drive innovation throughout their future careers," he adds.

Formula Student was established in 1998 and is run by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Student engineers get a crash course in design, manufacture and business – learning about team working, under pressure and to tight timescales.

Ross Brawn, principal of Formula One team, Brawn GP and Formula Student patron, explains: "Participation requires students to develop a rounded set of skills which will help them overcome the challenges they will meet when they leave university.

"They have to start with a concept, put a team together, work as a group and follow the project through to the point of actually using their final design and product."
 
Author
Brian Tinham
 
 
This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright 2012.
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
 
Your comments / feedback
Do you have any comments or feedback on this article? Please contact us by filling in the form below.
NameHide name
Your Email Address
Comments
Send
Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Terms and Conditions

To comment on news stories or blogs you need to complete our 60 second registration process. Once completed this then allows you to download any and all white papers, register for e-zines and access our detailed supplier directory for FREE.

If you are all ready a registered user then enter your e-mail address and login.

You will need to have logged in prior to entering your comments in the boxes provided.

Please enter your email address to login and gain free access to this site.
 
If you are using this site for the first time registration is quick and completely free.
 
Register Now - Register Now


Email Address :  

Remember Me: - If this box is ticked you will be automatically logged in when you return.

Important: To protect your privacy, do not select 'Remember Me' if other users have access to the computer you are using.

View Privacy Policy
 
Related Companies
Autodesk Ltd
 
 
Related News
Delcam urges manufacturers to maximise tax benefits
 
Autodesk increases cloud capability to include powerful simulation
 
Pointools launches point cloud software bundle
 
National Instruments and SolidWorks collaborate on virtual prototyping
 
Autodesk offers free software and resources for redundant design engineers
 
 
Related Technology
Autodesk opts for the suite life
 
Modular design saves time
 
Powering ahead to tomorrow’s designing
 
Lightning combines direct and parametric
 
AutoCAD goes back to Mac