Turns out, itâs not only love that can break your heart: robots can, and did, at the 22nd Annual Electrical & Computer Engineering Design Competition.
Third-year engineering students stood on the sidelines as their automated robot creations crashed, careened and, in some cases, completed the obstacle course laid out before them.
Tasked with designing a robot that would test their engineering skills, creativity, stamina, multi-tasking abilities and endurance when sleep-deprived, 21 teams of engineering students met under the roof of the Sexton Memorial Gymnasium on August 2 to out strategize, out design and out execute their fellow teammates.
âThe main objective of the course is to learn how to design in general,â explained Sara Stout-Grandy, who teaches the Design Methods II course. âThe students learn how to take a big project and divide it into small chunks to break down and design and build on their own, then integrate them all together in the end.â
Surviving the course
This yearâs competition had robots navigating a Survivor-themed obstacle course, complete with requisite fire lighting and flag raising. To make things even more interesting, for the first time in the competitionâs history, robots had to return to the course starting position, with mixed results.
âWe were pretty worried last night that we werenât going to get anywhere,â said Tyler MacPherson, standing alongside teammate Matthew Dobson. Their robot, âBarry Badrinath,â had to bow out of the competition at the onset of round five. âBasically, we blew up some things that are very important and now itâs not going to run anymore.â
Following a quiet first and second round that saw few robots stay on course and no fires lit, it was round three that had spectators and competitors on their feet.
Crowd-favourite Alex Parker and his robot, âSpicy Burrito,â were the first team to successfully activate the fire and raise their flag at home base. Heâor rather, his robotâwould go on to light three more fires before the competitionâs end, more than any other robot in the competition.
âI was really excited about the group that did the whole course correctly, that means we did something rightâ said Dr. Stout-Grandy. âThe groups that are struggling⊠theyâre learning and theyâre updating what little they can. Each round should improve as they learn what happened in the one before.âÂ
Head-to-head showdown
But ultimately, Spicy Burrito would not be numero uno.
After nine rounds, countless ties and some unplanned but impressive dance moves from the âbots, the final three standing would be Parkerâs Spicy Burrito, Luis Silva and Stanley Ifeanyiâs âMach 5â and Luc Lessardâs âMonsieur Robo.â
A quick elimination of Mach 5 saw Monsieur Robo and Spicy Burrito go head-to-head in the 10th and final round â with a surprise win from Mr. Lessardâs Monsieur Robo.
âI am extremely happy right now, itâs great,â said Mr. Lessard, moments after the final race. âTo get a lucky win there is surprising.â
But similar to his classmates, heâs modest. The Design Methods class, which begins in May, is a demanding one. Mr. Lessard himself worked until the wee hours before Mondayâs readiness assessment, grabbing an hour of sleep in the ±«Óătv parking lot before heading back to class. Â
When asked about the strategy behind Monsieur Roboâs design, he explained, âI kept it simple as possible and I used objects to help me as opposed to ruin me. Anytime I found an object I tried to straighten myself on the object and then go around it as opposed to just trying to go around it. I think that helped me on the playing field.â
As for Spicy Burrito? âIâm glad itâs over,â said Mr. Parker. âIâm going straight to bed.â
See more photos from the competition on .