Engineers excel in concrete canoe, bridge building
After paddling a lighter-than-water concrete canoe and assembling a 22-foot steel bridge, a USU engineering club finished first overall for the second consecutive year at the American Society of Civil Engineers Rocky Mountain Conference held March 29-31 at the University of Wyoming.
The USU chapter of the ASCE won first place in the concrete canoe competition, beating teams from South Dakota, New Mexico and all states in between.
The canoe competition was based on four criteria: a technical paper, an oral presentation, a final display and five races. The USU canoe team took first place in three of these criteria, giving it a six-point edge over the second-place team, Colorado State, said Mitch Dabling, a junior studying civil engineering and concrete canoe team captain.
The concrete canoe floated because it was made with a type of cement that uses glass rather sand as a filler, he said. The 18-foot canoe weighed 130 pounds and was a half-inch thick – a vast improvement from the team’s massive 317-pound boat from last year, Dabling said.
He said, according to competition requirements, the canoe “had to pop back out of the water after being fully submerged.”
“Sinking is always kind of a concern,” he said. “But we wear life jackets, and we’ve never sank in the past.”
The water in the reservoir – near the University of Wyoming – where the races were held was 60 degrees. The team took first place in the men’s and women’s sprint and endurance races and took third in the co-ed sprint.
“We accidentally tipped a little and took in a bit of water, which slowed us down,” Dabling said.
The canoe, which the team dubbed “Old Ephraim,” also took first place in the final display portion of the competition. Dabling said this victory could be attributed in part to Zach Scott, a student majoring in landscape architecture and design who painted the canoe with murals of Cache Valley.
The 24-member canoe crew has been working on this project since August, Dabling said. The team met weekly over the course of the year and practiced at First Dam at the mouth of Logan Canyon, he said.
“We’ve literally put thousands of hours into this project,” he said. “But it’s so much fun.”
The canoe team will be attending the ASCE National Concrete Canoe Competition on June 14-16 in Reno, Nev. Dabling said the club is multidisciplinary, and any students interested in participating on the team next year should contact him.
For the steel bridge component of the competition, 14 club members took third place overall, beating nine other teams, including the University of Utah.
This competition is scored by three criteria: the bridge’s weight, assembly speed and how much the bridge sags after being loaded with more than 2,000 pounds, said Bryant Cunningham, a senior studying civil engineering and the captain of the steel bridge team.
According to the University of Wyoming’s engineering website, USU took first place in the stiffness category with its bridge sagging .585 inches. The second-place team, the Colorado School of Mines, sagged nearly an inch.
USU took second place in the assembly speed category, constructing its bridge in about 10 minutes, plus a two-minute penalty, Cunningham said. The third-place team, Colorado School of Mines, constructed its bridge in 19 minutes, the website stated.
The team took third place in the weight category with its bridge weighing 256 pounds plus a 300-pound penalty for the bridge being incorrectly positioned, Cunningham said.
BYU constructed the lightest bridge – 160 pounds – at the competition, according to the website. The fourth-place team, the University of New Mexico, constructed a bridge weighing nearly 900 pounds.
Cunningham said the team is looking for donations so it can attend the ASCE National Steel Bridge Competition in South Carolina on May 24-25. He said interested donors could contact him.
“We learned a lot from designing and manufacturing this bridge,” he said. “We can definitely modify and improve it before going to nationals.”
– rouchelle.brockman@aggiemail.usu.edu