
As a part of the engineering curriculum at the University of Cincinnati, students are expected to complete a project of significant technical complexity. Over the course of their final year, students identify a problem they have encountered 
Projects this year included a retrofit kit to improve handling in vintage cars, a computer-controlled pumpkin carver, an entrant for the televised BattleBot competition in California, a propeller-less fishing boat, and more. 
Other innovations included an impressive group project to develop a self-contained wastewater treatment plant. Three students worked together to address the need for a rapidly deployable unit to process residential wastewater. The unit they developed is a 1/4-scale model of a shipping container featuring a 4-stage filtration/remediation process able to support hundreds of households. The unit is intended to prevent harmful human waste from entering 
Another team project involved a vehicle which has been entered into this year’s Society of Automotive Engineers “Baja” off-road vehicle competition. For the Baja competition, students from around the world build vehicles to compete on dirt tracks for acceleration, maneuverability, traction, and endurance. UC has entered many times in the past, often using and re-using an old frame. Realizing the design limitations of their existing frame, the UC team totally redesigned it and scratch-built a new one to compete in the upcoming 2016 competition. They will find how successful their re-design is at the Baja competition in Rochester, New York, this June.
The projects on display at Tech Expo indicate that there are some talented engineers entering the workforce. To see what they might be doing if they end up at EWI, check out our advanced automation capabilities.