'We Nailed It' | Eastern NC Now

An award-winning robot built by East Carolina University students may not look like R2D2 or WALL-E, but it's no bucket of bolts.

ENCNow
    Publisher's note: This article, by Kathryn Kennedy, was originally published in ECU News Services.

ECU robot takes second place at national competition

    An award-winning robot built by East Carolina University students may not look like R2D2 or WALL-E, but it's no bucket of bolts.

    Direct it to a table
ECU professor and ATMAE faculty advisor Amy Frank, left, and ECU ATMAE chapter president and robot competition team leader Philippe Schmider are shown with the award-winning robot. (Photo by Cliff Hollis)
filled with colored ping pong balls and it will shovel them into its containing bin, sort them by color and wheel around to deposit them in predetermined locations. The robot does this automatically - without a human at the controls or giving commands.

    ECU's robot was so good at this task, it won second place in the Association of Technology, Management and Applied Engineering's national competition last November in Nashville, Tenn.

    "ECU was the first to go and we nailed it," said Department of Technology Systems Chair T.J. Mohammed, who attended the competition.

    The brains behind this machine belonged to eight students in the College of Technology and Computer Science. Between them, they had a lot of skills - familiarity with machinery and engineering, computer programming and technology systems. Still, team leader and ECU ATMAE chapter president Philippe Schmider said it was quite a challenge.

    "The skills were there, we'd just never built a robot," he said.

    ATMAE faculty advisor Amy Frank said the project gives participating students the chance to apply the theories they're learning in the classroom.

    "Everything you plan, it never works out that way," Schmider said, reflecting on the project. "You learn to adapt."

    The cost of powering a robot is one challenge, which they conquered by gathering donations, partnering with local industries and seeking student government support. They also built several of the parts rather than buying them pre-made, Schmider said.

    The team
The ECU ATMAE robot competition team is pictured above with the winning robot.
began working last March after receiving specifications the robot had to meet from ATMAE. They produced sketches, purchased materials and began building. Plenty of modification happened along the way, and once construction concluded, work turned to programming the robot's functions.

    The project gathered steam heading into the fall semester. In the final months, team members were spending every weekend with the robot.

    By competition day they were confident. Practice runs made them sure their robot could complete the task at hand.

    "We were the underdogs, so we really enjoyed it," Schmider said.

    The team had a record to overcome.

    "Last year (in 2011), the robot broke at the starting line," he said. "ECU was not able to finish a robot the year prior to that. But the second place finish proved that we are, and will continue to be, highly competitive at the ATMAE conferences."

    Schmider, a senior, and five other team members participated in the challenge as part of an electromechanical systems integration class, taught by instructor Jimmy Linn. Those members were Grover Black, Ryan Burk, Will Garren, Joe Middleburg and Masato Nagakane.

    Two students from different disciplines joined the team as volunteers from the larger ECU ATMAE chapter: senior and industrial technology major Wesley Shornock and Patrick Gookin, who graduated in December with a bachelor's degree in computer science. That teamwork illustrates something that's happening with increasing frequency within the College of Technology and Computer Science, Mohammed said.

    "We're trying to promote partnerships among the departments in everything we do," he explained, adding that it reflects the kind of teamwork that happens daily in the workplace. "We want to encourage and nurture collaboration while (students) are here."

    Remaining team members and newcomers to the class and club are already gearing up for the 2013 competition, which will be held in New Orleans. Rumor has it, Frank said, their next robot might have to shoot hoops.


Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Rising to New Levels East Carolina University, School News, The Region, Neighboring Counties Red Carpet Research


HbAD0

Latest Neighboring Counties

A North Carolina State Senate race is heading for a recount after the two pro-Trump Republicans come down to a two vote margin.
This is simply a failure of will, and we are here to help impose that will today, so that to me is the simple punchline," said State Treasurer Brad Briner. "I appreciate the leaders of Rocky Mount being here, but we need to get to a place where there is the will to fix a very, very serious problem.”
A federal judge will not issue an injunction blocking local Watauga County election districts created by the Republican-led North Carolina General Assembly.
The FBI has captured Alejandro “Alex” Rosales Castillo, who is on the 10 Most Wanted Fugitive list and wanted in connection with a 2016 murder in Charlotte.
A major redevelopment project planned in Morehead City has been scrapped following strong public opposition over the use of eminent domain.
In the coming months, the North Carolina Supreme Court will decide whether a class-action lawsuit can move forward against Raleigh over water and sewer impact fees.
Former congressman Wiley Nickel made his candidacy for the office of Wake County district attorney official this week, with his Tuesday announcement.
Groups representing North Carolina's travel and tourism industry support a lawsuit against Currituck County at the North Carolina Supreme Court.
Plaintiffs in a $16 million class-action lawsuit against Raleigh challenged the city's legal tactics in a new state Supreme Court filing.

HbAD1

 
 
Back to Top