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Engineering student team behind top design in Canada
Engineering student team behind top design in Canada
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Left
to righ: Ryan Galloway, Ben Sunderland, Jeb Molcak, Mike Otto won
top honours at the Canadian Society of Manufacturing Engineer’s
National Design Competition in Halifax. The team is supervised by
Dr. Yongsheng Ma. |
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Story | (Jun 9, 2009)
By Phoebe Dey
Edmonton—At first they were just four engineering
students who didn’t know each other, never mind anything about an eye
disorder called strabismus. But this week they earned a national honour
for designing an implant to help treat the disorder.
“The whole
experience at nationals was quite surreal,” said Jeb Molcak, a member of
the team of mechanical engineering students who won top honours at the
Canadian Society of Manufacturing Engineer’s National Design Competition
in Halifax. “We competed against nine other universities with projects
varying from a battling robots game to a city transit bus design. Our
design was one of the most innovative and also incorporated
creativity.
“It was an honour to represent the university and be
recognized for our hard work.”
At the beginning of the school year,
Molcak, Ryan Galloway, Michael Otto and Benjamin Sunderland all had one
mutual friend who suggested they would make a good team. So after a mass
e-mail with everyone’s contact information, the group met for the first
time and buckled down.
Molcak pushed his group toward a biomedical
project. A transfer student from biochemistry, he has loved the medical
industry. “The one thing we all really liked was that we were creating a
device from scratch,” said Molcak. “The doctors had a problem and it was
up to us to create a device to fix this problem.”
Drs. Kourosh
Sabri and Kam Kassiri, from the U of A’s Department of Ophthalmology,
explained that although surgeries on people with strabismus—a condition
where the eyes are not properly aligned with each other—are common,
success is not always guaranteed. Forty per cent of patients need
additional surgeries. The doctors wanted a device to implant that would
align the muscle properly and be much less invasive, minimizing the
surgeries or in the best case, eliminating them.
“None of us knew
about the disease but once we started working on it we realized we had
friends who had strabismus,” said Galloway. “We had a strong group of guys
who were always motivated and strived for success because we really wanted
to make this device usable for people.”
By the end of their
fourth-year design course, the team created two prototypes, and had their
names listed as inventors on a patent application. “We’re pretty excited
about it all,” said Galloway. “We’re going to try to continue on the
project to take it to the next step and help the doctors as much as we
can. We want to see it become successful.”
The group’s team
advisor, Dr. Yongsheng Ma, said this particular group was one of the most
enthusiastic he has seen. “I was impressed by their self-motivation and
organization,” said Ma, who teaches in the Department of Mechanical
Engineering. “They had a lot of brainstorming ideas, the right amount of
curiosity and the basic principles of engineering nailed
down.”
Before getting to Halifax, the team walked away with the
overall award at the department’s Capstone Honours Awards Banquet,
splitting $1,000 among the team and taking home a $2,000 planetary-geared
truck hub trophy that is fully functional and come with a set of tools to
disassemble them.
At the awards banquet in Edmonton, the team was
one of four chosen to present their designs. Professor Curt Stout and
retired professor Dave Budney originally started an endowment to fund the
event in 1999, to recognize excellence in engineering design. Individual
sponsors and industry contributed to the endowment, including the Society
of Manufacturing Engineers (Edmonton Chapter), Shell, Universe Machine,
Agrium and others.
“We wanted to change the dynamic from winners
and losers to a celebration of design and I think it’s motivating for
students,” said Stout. “On the last day of class, I was speaking to one
student and asked him why he puts so much time and effort into the course.
He said he wanted to do well for the industry sponsors, he didn’t want to
let his teammates down and he hoped to win a capstone award.
“The
group who won this year did an excellent job on a project that helps
people and I’m glad we could recognize it.”
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