Students from the Master of Mechanical Engineering - Automotive program presented posters on their co-op placements Wednesday.
Students from the Master of Mechanical Engineering - Automotive program presented posters on their co-op placements Wednesday.
A project to design and build hydraulic robotic arms taught a class of engineering students about the challenges of the profession.
A co-op placement provided more than practical work experience for Bhavesh Lakhankiya.
Not only did the master of engineering student gain invaluable experience working at Diageo Canada Inc. in Amherstburg, Ont., but Lakhankiya also said he learned something that can’t be taught in the classroom.
“As an international student, this was my first opportunity to work within the Canadian work culture,” Lakhankiya said, who grew up in India.
The public is invited as eight M.Eng students discuss their co-op work experiences, Friday in the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
Participants are all students in the master of engineering in mechanical engineering with the automotive option program. They will present posters on their co-operative education placements from 2 to 4:30 p.m. in the east atrium of the building’s lobby.
Custom valve covers engineered by UWindsor students put the finishing touch on a one-of-a-kind 1967 Ford Mustang.
The University of Windsor Rocketry Team finished third overall in its first-ever competition.
Engineering students showed their experiential learning during Capstone Design Demonstration Day, Friday in the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
More than 300 University of Windsor students will display the latest engineering innovations Friday.
Positioned in the middle of Narayan Kar’s lab sits an electric motor from the Ford Motor Company: a machine that had been scrutinized by researchers and engineers for countless hours.
Yet, the University of Windsor engineering professor has set out to take that motor and make it even better.
“Our work will never end and this will always be an open-ended problem,” said Dr. Kar. “There will always be an opportunity to make them lighter, compact and more efficient.”
Engineering professor Narayan Kar discussed his research into electric vehicles with federal officials during the Parliament Pop-Up Research Park.