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View Full Version : Students Demonstrate Human Transporter Vehicle at NIWeek (Newswire, RPI)




luckie
08-09-2006, 08:06 PM
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1666

For Immediate Release
August 7, 2006 Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu
Rensselaer Students Demonstrate Human Transporter Vehicle at NIWeek

Troy, N.Y. — A self-balancing human transporter designed by Rensselaer undergraduate engineering students will take center stage at an international conference attended by thousands of engineers. The students will demonstrate their device, which is modeled after the Segway Human Transporter, during an Aug. 9 keynote address at NIWeek, the world’s largest virtual instrumentation conference and exhibition, held Aug. 8-10 in Austin, Texas.

Two engineering seniors — Matthew Rosmarin and Teresa Bernardi — will join Tim Dehne, National Instruments senior vice president of research and development, on stage during his Aug. 9 keynote address. The students worked under the guidance of Kevin Craig, professor of mechanical, aerospace, and nuclear engineering at Rensselaer.

“The Segway is an excellent example of a mechatronic system, the result of the integration through design of mechanical engineering, electronics, computers, and controls,” said Craig, who created the Mechatronics Teaching and Research Laboratory at Rensselaer. “This is truly a multidisciplinary project, which is what mechatronics and engineering are all about.”

With permission from Segway Inc., the project began in January 2005 as part of Rensselaer’s spring semester Mechatronic System Design class, where a team of students built a prototype human transporter. Based on that experience, Craig designed a table-top version during the summer to use as a case study in the fall semester. In spring 2006, a new team of five students developed the current version of the human transporter presented at NIWeek. In addition to Rosmarin and Bernardi, the three other team members were Laura Corman, Corey Gray, and Jennifer Scharfe.

The first version worked reasonably well, according to Craig, but this year the students took advantage of National Instruments LabVIEW graphical development environment to integrate the design process and produce a drastically improved transporter.

“This system will be used for many years to come at Rensselaer as a case study in mechatronics and as motivation for our engineering freshmen,” Craig said. “Every skill used to create this system is essential for the practice of engineering in the 21st century.”

The human transporter is just one example of mechatronic systems created by Rensselaer students. Others include an automotive traction control test bed, a planetary-gear inverted pendulum, and a hybrid hydraulic/pneumatic positioning system. The traction control system was used on the Rensselaer Formula SAE (Society of Automotive Engineers) Team Car this year.

Dean Kamen, president of DEKA Research & Development Corporation and inventor of the Segway Human Transporter, will deliver the closing keynote address at NIWeek on Aug. 10. Kamen visited the Rensselaer campus in December 2005 as part of the annual Trustee Celebration of Faculty Achievement. He met with high school and middle school students involved in FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) robotics competitions, discussing his passion for exciting the next generation of scientists and engineers. And of course he brought his Segway along for the trip.

http://www.rpi.edu/web/Campus.News/photos/rpisegway-pr.jpg

Video -> http://mechatronics.rpi.edu/videos/Segway.wmv




Hiphop
08-09-2006, 08:12 PM
Repost..
http://forums.segwaychat.com/showthread.php?t=12903

bystander
08-09-2006, 09:05 PM
Repost..
http://forums.segwaychat.com/showthread.php?t=12903You may be new here.

This is the news forum. Articles are posted here for reference.

The other post you referred to was in the for discussion thread.

They like to keep this news forum area free from discussion clutter.

But I am contributing to the clutter by answering - lol.

Often these threads are closed soon after the initial post, which keeps folks from responding directly.

If you feel like commenting on any article, make a new discussion in the appropriate forum, then link to the article here.

It's sort of a "central depository" so there isn't so much news article duplication.