MRacing sets acceleration record at SAE event

May 21, 2010
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  • umichnews@umich.edu

ANN ARBOR—Rocketing from zero to 75 mph in 3.766 seconds, the University of Michigan’s MRacing Formula SAE team set an SAE Collegiate Design Series record in acceleration at the event held at Michigan International Speedway May 12-15.

Racing against 120 teams from universities and colleges across the globe, the team had its best finish in 16 years. The Michigan team took second overall in the competition.

“It was very exciting,” said project manager and driver Katherine Lapham, a senior mechanical engineering student. “Our goal was to finish in the top five this year and we were aiming for top three. The top teams from Europe did come to the Michigan event this year.”

MRacing won first in the GM Acceleration Award, the FEV Powertrain Development Award and the Joe Gibbs Spirit of Innovation Award; and second in the Honda R&D Americas Inc Dynamic Event Award and the GM Endurance Award. The Gibbs award recognizes a simulation that Sumeet Rai, a senior mechanical engineering student, has performed over the past few years.

This was the first of two international competitions the team participates in every year. The next is in Germany, Aug. 4-8.

“The whole team is ecstatic about our finish and we hope we can take this momentum overseas,” said team captain Chai Pocknett, a senior mechanical engineering student.

MRacing has been a College of Engineering student organization since 1986. The team came in first in this U.S. competition in 1994.

Pocknett credits the intense testing schedule for the team’s impressive finish.

“Some years, we only manage to do five days of testing. This year, we had more than a month,” Pocknett said.

Pocknett thanks the college for giving the team access to the parking lot near their shop, and Ford for allowing them to use space at Michigan Proving Grounds.

The University of Michigan College of Engineering is ranked among the top engineering schools in the country. At $160 million annually, its engineering research budget is one of the largest of any public university. Michigan Engineering is home to 11 academic departments and a National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center. The college plays a leading role in the Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute and hosts the world-class Lurie Nanofabrication Facility. Michigan Engineering’s premier scholarship, international scale and multidisciplinary scope combine to create The Michigan Difference. Find out more at www.engin.umich.edu

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