Central Lakes College's Quadcopter team participated in the Minnesota Space Grant Consortium's Community College Quadcopter Challenge on April 15.
Eight student teams from five community colleges participated, with each team building an ELEV-8 quadcopter from a kit and then creatively outfitting it to address a list of challenge goals.
These goals included adding rotor protection, using 3-D printing to create a flexible camera mount, devising a mechanism for collecting granular and fluid samples and building an Arduino-logged sensor suite for environmental characterization. All the teams work together collaboratively, with no place rankings.
"The quadcopter challenge is quite elaborate," said Nathan Peterson, CLC robotics instructor, in a news release.
During the season, each team creates three progress reports, four videos, holds weekly team meetings and gives bi-weekly status updates to a professor at the University of Minnesota. At the challenge event, the team participates by giving an oral dissertation and performing preflight testing and demonstrations. They perform multiple flight challenges such as four types of sample collection, close-up imaging, area mapping and maneuverability exercises.
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"The team did quite well until they experienced a catastrophic failure and crash that crippled their vehicle, after which they were unable to overcome during the event," Peterson said. "We all had high expectations and we were all devastated by the crash. I am proud of the team for their composure in dealing with their extreme situation."
The schools that participated were CLC, Century College, Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College, Itasca Community College and Minnesota West Community and Technical College. The Minnesota Space Grant Consortium is supported by NASA.