U of T Engineering supermileage team wins Shell Eco-marathon in Detroit
Eighty-nine engines revved in Motor City this weekend, but they weren鈥檛 racing for gold 鈥 they were racing for green.
The 重口味SM Supermileage team won this year鈥檚 in Detroit, Michigan, with an efficiency of 3,421 miles per gallon 鈥 the equivalent of 6.82 millilitres of gasoline per 10 kilometres.
That鈥檚 less than five tablespoons of gas to drive from the foot of Yonge Street in Toronto to Barrie, Ontario.
U of T squeaked out a win in the very last run of the event to upset the dominant Al Erion team from Universit茅 Laval. A perennial favourite, Laval took home the title at the past two events, and five out of six previous years in the highly-competitive Prototype Gasoline category.
鈥淓ven on that last run I don鈥檛 think most of us believed we would come in first, we just thought we might improve,鈥 said grad student Mengqi Wang, co-president and electrical lead of the Supermileage team. 鈥淚t was literally the last possible moment 鈥 we were the final car on the track and we just sneaked past them.鈥
The surprise win couldn鈥檛 have been more dramatic: the team thought they鈥檇 had their last run around the 1.4-kilometre track, and were in the fuelling tent having their gas consumption measured and logged with only five minutes left before the track was slated to close.
鈥淲e鈥檇 already done media interviews about coming in second, and being happy about improving on last year鈥檚 performance,鈥 says Prashanth Murali, the team鈥檚 mechanical lead credited with designing and fabricating a much lighter aerobody for this year鈥檚 34-kilogram vehicle. 鈥淲e were resigned to our fate.鈥
Then they realized there were only two cars in line at the start. 鈥淭he official at the start line told us if we lined up right now we could get another run in,鈥 remembers Wang. 鈥淲e sprinted back to the tent and dragged the car over.鈥
They finished the run and went back in the fuel tent to measure the vehicle鈥檚 temperature and consumption, but because they were the very last car, they had to wait for the official rankings. 鈥淲e could tell our consumption was low, but we didn鈥檛 know where we鈥檇 placed,鈥 says Wang. 鈥淗alf the team was screaming, half the team was trying to get us to calm down.鈥
(Above: the U of T team at the closing ceremony of the Shell Eco-marathon Americas 2015/ photo by Rick Osentoski/AP Images for Shell)
This is the third year the Supermileage team has competed in the Shell Eco-marathon, each time in the Prototype Gasoline class, the biggest category at the two-day event. In 2014 they came second after jockeying for the lead with Laval all weekend. 鈥淲e were neck and neck with them the entire competition,鈥 says Wang. 鈥淲e knew exactly what we needed to do to get the extra mileage, but we just couldn鈥檛 get the last run in.鈥
That year the team also won a technical innovation prize for their custom-built engine, the only custom engine in the entire competition. They hope to continue to improve on their engine, as well as perfecting a reliable clutch and making improvements to the vehicle鈥檚 aerodynamics, including wind-tunnel testing. Wang says the team also has plans to break into the Battery Electric category.
Founded in 2013, the Supermileage team is composed of 25 undergraduate and graduate students from U of T Engineering, and is supervised by Professor Kamran Behdinan of mechanical and industrial engineering. Wang and Murali both say they can鈥檛 wait to realize the many improvements they have in store for next year鈥檚 Eco-marathon. The competition returns to Detroit in 2016, where they hope to defend their title on the same track.
鈥淥ur actual goal is to beat the North American record and see how far we can push the record,鈥 says Wang. 鈥淎ll of us were a little disappointed by how close we were with Laval 鈥 just like last year, either team could have won. So the goal for us is to really set the bar for the field.鈥
The international event, which celebrated its 30th anniversary this year, drew 113 teams from more than 1,000 universities and high schools across the Americas, including participants from Brazil, Guatemala, Mexico and the United States. In addition to gasoline, teams entered futuristic vehicles running on diesel, ethanol, electricity, compressed natural gas, gas-to-liquid fuel and hydrogen power. Teams competed for awards in best fuel economy, safety, design and team spirit.
Marit Mitchell is a writer with the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering at the 重口味SM.