American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

2008 ASME Chair G Bratzel '09 says helloASME at Seattle University operates both as an ASME student section and an university club. It is one of the most active engineering club on campus. Every year the club participates in the following:

Upcoming event are posted on the bulletin board outside ENGR 415. Due to the limited space and the hilliness of Seattle, the club focuses on the utility class HPVC, often adding daring design features. The name of the SU vehicles are the "Hawkenheimers." Due to the demand from senior design, our HPVC project is a club activity run by underclassmen (juniors, sophomores, and freshman), with juniors lead.

I Mayther '09 in a onesieGroup Pic at 2008 HPVC West Award Banquet, Harrah's Casino, Reno, NVThe 2008 entry "Leonard G. Hawkenheimer" is our first attempt at front-wheel drive. It had an inverted pendulum 4-bar linkage rear-wheels that allow the delta trike to lean into turns, but was plagued with drive train issues that despite best efforts, was not fully resolved by the time of the race. The vehicle took 1st place in design and performed well enough to win 1st place overall. The 2008 HPVC West was hosted by UNR at Reno, Nevada.

Developing Technical SkillsN Heitzinger (Floppy) '07 working on the 2006 entry

Working on the ASME project is a great way to learn new skills, such as machining and welding needed for fabrication. Non-technical skills such as organization, planning, people-skills needed for interacting with donors are also important. Technical communication skill is a key element needed for the written report and oral presentation, a substantial portion of the competition. Well-documented design, analysis, and testing of an innovative vehicle (that performs) makes HPVC an excellent engineering project.

MIG welding the frameSuccess!! after at least 4-5 tries (Above) N. Heitzinger '07 machining steel tubings, (Far Left) A. Lyberger '07 welding the vehicle frame, (Left) B. Hailey '07 and E. Tyler '07 thermoformed a clear plastic sheet into a bubble canopy using an oven they built.

Wind tunnel test of scaled modelFEA on roll-barMore than Bike Building

Students developed strain-gage, signal conditioning, and data acquisition system to monitor stresses of critical components using a hand-held portable computer in real time. Aerodynamic tests on scaled models were also conducted with an educational wind tunnel to determine the optimal fairing
Impact testing at PACCARCamera capture of crash sequence configuration. We have also crash tested a full-size prototype at 30-mph at the PACCAR Technology Center to understand the behavior of our rollbars under impulsive load.

Professional Development

It is sometimes difficult to land your first engineering job or internship (the one you really wanted) due to lack of experience. Participating in an engineering competition helps to mitigate that. Employers are looking for someone who work well with others, has drive and initiatives, has some technical ability and experience, can communicate effectively, and can beat a hard deadline and accomplish a measurable result. The ASME HPVC is all of those things. Our students often recall stories from their HPVC experience at job interviews. The ASME HPVC event has been ongoing for 25 years, so the ME community is well aware of it. Many hiring managers participated in the event (or similar projects) as students and remember them fondly.

Group Pic 2005 after raceSocial Activities

The club also have social gathering at pizzarias and pubs around campus, especailly after a long day working on HPVC. ASME also attend classic movies as a group when they are shown on the big screen at the Egyptian Theater just north of campus (such as "The Big Lebowski" night in 2007). For 2008-9, the club will host special social events for our Japanese mechanical engineering exchange students from Kogakuin University while they are in Seattle.

2005 T-shirt, a assmebly drawing for motorcycle transmissionTrying out Cowboy hats and shades at Walmart, Reno, NV (blazing sunlight at race)T-Shirts

To project a team image while in competition, the ASME club members design T-shirts and makes them based on the number of presale order. The 2008 team wore cardinal T-shirts with "Seattle University ASME (ME in hand gestures)" in front, and the slogan "We put the ingenue in ingenuity" and bike tools on the back. These words, we think, are related to "ingenieur" (French or German) which means "engineer" in English.

G Bratzel '09 and A Lybarger '07, Mt. Shasta as seen from the Weed Rest Area Displaying ME hand sign
B Hensley '09

2004 Group Pic at OSU(Above R) 2008 Group Picture after the race, displaying ME hand signal.

(Below R) 2004 Group Picture before the race, at the Alexander Field House on the campus of Oregon State University.

B Hensley '09 strapped in Reno, R&R after the utility race

(Left) B. Hensley '09, making sure the rider is enclosed by all the hard points on the 2008 vehicle.

(Right) Reno, NV. Site of the 2008 ASME HPVC West.

kids impressed with our rides J Cotter '05 and D Engebretsen '04

(Above) 2004 Outreach activites at Inavale and Mountain View elementary schools, Corvallis, OR.

(Below) 2004 J. Cotter '05 and D. Engebretsen '04 talking to kids.

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V Templora '04 smiling for TV cameraPublicity

Sometimes, our adventure find their way into local newspapers and TV News programs. Our adventures to OSU in 2004 was covered by Corvallis Gazette-Times (same story was carried by Albany Democrat-Harald) and Associated Press.

(Right) V. Templora '04 giving an interview for TV news on KVAL (CBS affiliate) outside of Alexander Field House on the campus of OSU.

G Bratzel '09 M Buenvenida '04

(Left) students hydrate with a bottle of Gatorade, G Bratzel '09 (2008)

(Right) and with a whole gallon of milk. M. Buenvenida '04 (2004)

A Lyberger '07 G Bratzel '09

(Left) Holding the vehicle together while riding. A Lybarger '07, 2005

(Right) G. Bratzel '09, 2007. Background: world's largest wind tunnel (inlet on the right) at NASA Ames. Pictures 1, 2, and 3.

J Kraft '04 and D Engebretsen '04 B Hailey '07

(Left) J. Kraft '04 and D. Engebretsen '04 in Corvallis, OR. 2004

(Right) B. Hailey '07, in San Luis Obispo, CA. 2006

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(Left) M. Reha '09, on Leonard G. Hawkenheimer in Reno, NV 2008

(Right) V. Templora '04 at the start of the race in Corvallis, OR. 2004 (Photo courtesy of Corvallis Gazette-Times, we can't take picture this good)

 

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    B Hensley '09 on utility course B Hensley '09 riding upwind on a runway at Reno-Stead airport, 2008. Note the trunk between the back wheels needed for utility class vehicles.

Department of Mechanical Engineering | 901 12th Ave. 518 ENGR, Seattle, WA 98122-1090
Telephone: 206.296.5520 FAX: 206.296.2173