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November 18th, 2017, 03:44 PM
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Moon Buggy Chandigarh University
Hi I would like to have the information about the team from Chandigarh University winning the 20th Annual Great Moonbuggy Race organized by NASA? The Eight member team from Chandigarh University has bagged 1st rank in Asia as well as stood 1st amongst the Indian teams at the 20th Annual Great Moonbuggy Race Organized by NASA held at Huntsville, Alabama, at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center. Beating more than 16 groups from India which included groups from conspicuous organizations like Thapar University Patiala, PEC Chandigarh, UIET, Punjab University Chandigarh, UIET Kurukshetra and SRM University and general 22 groups from Asia which included groups from India, Russia and UAE in the renowned international event organised by NASA, Team-CU won this tree and made India glad at International level in the field of Engineering and Technology. It is likewise essential that the general Global Ranking of Team-CU has been twelfth in the occasion and second among the classification of the Institutes partaking in the occasion for the first run through. The NASA Moon Buggy Race 2013 saw colossal reaction as more than 98 groups from USA, Europe, Russia, Middle East and India took part in the occasion. Team from Chandigarh University included Sahib Sood, a Mechanical Engineering understudy who lead unforeseen containing 5 colleagues from Mechanical Engineering Shubeg Singh, Harman Singh, Parul Kashyap, Palaash Plaha and Jayant Lamba, while the other 2 individuals Tanvi were from Civil Engineering and Taniya Singh from Electronics and Communications. International Space Education Institute, a group from Russia won first Rank among the Asian groups. Timed with the best aggregate planning of 07:15 mins, the CU-Gharuan group took just 00:26 sec to Assemble the Moon Buggy that tends to a progression of building issues that were like issues confronted by the first Moonbuggy group and afterward keep running over a half-mile reproduced lunar landscape course including "cavities", rocks, "magma" edges, slants and "lunar" soil . Last edited by Neelurk; May 7th, 2020 at 10:08 AM. |