This year, YSU Steel Bridge and Canoe teams both won the Ohio Valley Student Conference into their categories. This can be a 1st year that YSU has won both to begin with positions. However, they did not place first in any of the canoe races this holiday season.
Below are descriptions for each competition and what the teams did:
Steel Bridge (1st place overall in the community)
They designed, fabricated, and constructed an approximately 17-foot long steel bridge. It was actually becoming a 1:10 scale label of a 170 foot long bridge. The team began concentrating on this in September of 2017. This model bridge was required to be made from pieces that have been no more than proportions of 4 inches x 6 inches x 3 feet. Every bit of the model must be connected with a metal bolt. We were holding judged on structural efficiency, or the mixture of the?weight and deflection (the amount it sags when packed with 2500 pounds) score, and construction economy (speed helping put it together times range of builders).? Each one of these categories is associated with a monetary cost. Earnings pricing is then given to build the bridge and the team while using lowest cost wins. This season the team placed second in structural efficiency and first in construction economy. Furthermore they placed first in display, construction speed, and stiffness.
Due to the first-place finish in the Ohio Valley Student Conference, the is advancing for the national competition hosted within the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign at the end of May. The c’s previously advanced to nationals in 2016, placing 12th, and 2017 placing 11th. At the regional level, that is globally, around 300 teams compete to attend nationals and approximately 50 teams make it to the nation’s competition.
Concrete Canoe (1st place overall in the market):
The team starts implementing making the canoe from concrete in September. They start with designing a hull with the boat’s shape, then analyzing the structure to find the strength needed for competition quota. The then creates a form and pours the concrete with it. After sanding and finishing the concrete mold, they has their final canoe. On the competition, they’re judged on four categories (all weighted equally): oral presentation, design paper, final product, and race points. This year’s team placed first in oral presentation, design paper, and final product. Additionally they placed second in race points.
Due recommended to their first-place finish within the Ohio Valley Student Conference this current year, these are advancing on the national competition hosted at North park State University in June. This is actually the first time that YSU’s Concrete Canoe team has advanced to nationals since 2013 when YSU’s team placed 11th in america. For the regional level, approximately precisely the same amount of concrete canoe teams compete to consult with the nation’s competition because bridge teams. However, only beginning regional finishers advance to nationals inside canoe competition. At nationals, there are approximately 20 teams from civil engineering colleges across the country that compete.

Above may be the photo from the team together with the concrete canoe. From left to right:?Kenny Anderson, Montana Gessler, Jeremy Large, Luis Vindel, Nicholas Martin, Mike Palagano, William Graham, Tommy Carnes, Colton Hamilton, Spencer DeSalvo, Emma Daugherty, Greg Lipp.
Below is often a photo of your team right after the awards banquet. From left to right: Jeremy Large, Montana Gessler, Luis Vindel, Spencer DeSalvo, Colton Hamilton, Tommy Carnes, Kenny Anderson, GregLipp, William Graham, Nicholas Martin, Mike Palagano, Dr.?Islam (faculty advisor).

