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Image Credit: Bobby Locke

Freshman Engineering Students Create Solutions to Real-World Problems

By Caleb Riston, September 29, 2016

Freshman engineering students don’t often get to work on real-world problems, but last spring Don Riley’s Introduction to Engineering class at Walla Walla University did just that using cutting-edge 3-D printing technology.

The 57 students in the class were organized into teams of three and four, and each team was given a RepRap 2020 Prusa i3 aluminum 3-D printer kit. These small but complex printers took each team an average of 40 hours of lab time to construct and calibrate.

3-D printers offer students the freedom to rapidly create prototype solutions to problems without the limitations of traditional manufacturing. Riley, professor of engineering, tasked his students with designing and creating a solution to a problem presented by fellow WWU alumnus Kirk Betz, 2010, engineering, assistant manager of Sunset Lake Camp in Wilkeson, Wash. Betz was looking for high-quality, affordable radio belt-clip swivel adapters for camp-issued staff radios. The 3-D-printed swivel adapters would have to hold the weight of the radio and survive pushing and pulling without breaking.

While a swivel adapter may sound like a simple project, it actually proved to be an ideal challenge. The adapter needed to smoothly slide into the belt clip, lock into place and be easy to release when the radio is needed. A well-designed and well-functioning swivel adapter required a slight overhang.

The limitations of the capable but very simple 3-D printer kits challenged students as they attempted to print the swivel adapters that they designed. Freshman civil engineering major Katie Mowatt explains, “The kit we built does not print support material. That meant that we had to make our own spacers and use a design that could be printed without much overhang.”

Different groups came up with different solutions to the problem, including adding support inserts during printing, printing two pieces that would be glued together after printing and printing two pieces that would snap together.

Tyler Nelson, teacher’s assistant, says, “Our academic goal of challenging students to find creative solutions was exceeded. Professor Riley and I were pleased to see the variety and quality of the solutions that the students had.” To date, none of the designs have been able to withstand prolonged testing for full-scale production, but the goal of challenging the freshman students before they begin their other engineering classes was achieved.

“In the end there was a lot of teamwork, not only within teams but between all the students in the class,” says Mowat. “As a class we learned a lot more about each other and what each of us is good at. The experience helped all of us to come out of our comfort zone and ask each other for help.”

Watch a video of one of the swivel clip adapters in action at www.wallawalla.edu/3-Dprinting.

Image
Credit
Bobby Locke
Image
Credit
Bobby Locke
Image
Credit
Bobby Locke
Image
Credit
Bobby Locke
Image
Credit
Bobby Locke
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Featured in: October 2016

Author

Caleb Riston

WWU university relations student writer
Section
Walla Walla University

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The Gleaner is a gathering place with news and inspiration for Seventh-day Adventist members and friends throughout the northwestern United States. It is an important communication channel for the North Pacific Union Conference — the regional church support headquarters for Adventist ministry throughout Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. The original printed Gleaner was first published in 1906, and has since expanded to a full magazine with a monthly circulation of more than 40,000. Through its extended online and social media presence, the Gleaner also provides valuable content and connections for interested individuals around the world.

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