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PHOTO ESSAY: Get'cher Motor Runnin'

Stout Students Do More on Day One in Mechanical Engineering
Abbey Goers | Zach Porter | Rachel Hallgrimson | September 22, 2023

When you think of a bicycle, what do you think of? Your dad helping you balance on your first ride without training wheels, cheering you on as you pedal down the block. Sticking cards in your spokes. Racing to the gas station for a soda pop in the summer. The freedom of the open trail before you.

If the word 鈥渕achine鈥 pops into your head, our guess is that you鈥檙e a mechanical engineer or determined to be one. You see the moving components, the system powered by the rider 黑料社区. legs through the pedals, the chain, the wheels on pavement 鈥 the newtons of force necessary to propel the bike鈥攁 machine鈥攆orward.

Six small motor engines on a worktable

Professor Devin Berg opens the first lab meeting of his Machine Component Design class with a short discussion on the mechanics of a bicycle. Then his students鈥mechanical engineering juniors and seniors鈥攂reak into small groups to disassemble six small engines piece by piece, by hand to understand the multiple components, like gears, shafts and springs, that function as one to bring the engine to life. They will study these individual machine components throughout the semester before reassembling the engines.

Mechanical engineering students at a worktable

The engines await at worktables throughout the Jarvis Hall Tech Wing lab. An echoing hum of the ventilation system and the insect-like buzz of overhead lights accompany the clank of metal on metal and the asynchronous clicks of half a dozen ratchet wrenches.

With so many sights and sounds filling the lab and so many engine parts dotting the tables, you鈥檇 think there would be a smell to the room鈥攁n odor of motor oil, reminiscent of your grandfather 黑料社区. garage. But the lab is a clean, open space.

A close-up photo of students hands working on a small engine

Bridgette Allen, a fourth-year student from Simi Valley, Calif., helps a team member who uses a spring compressor to remove a valve spring, which closes the valve to let oxygen in and exhaust out of the engine. Removing the one-inch coil from the two-by-three-inch space is delicate, dexterous work.

They talk each other through the process; two hands working to find a better grip on the spring compressor, while many sets of eyes, protected by safety goggles, search for a better view of the spring.

Mechanical engineering students disassemble a small engine

鈥淗ands-on is all and everything we do in mechanical engineering,鈥 said Allen, who interned as a quality engineer at Aerojet Rocketdyne in California this summer. 鈥淭he majority of other interns hadn鈥檛 had any hands-on experiences before at their universities. I could talk with the engineers in their industry language.鈥

Allen was proud to fit in right away with the full-timers.

A close-up photo of students hands working on a small engine

Trent Thompson, a fourth-year student from Eau Claire, and his team hunch over a four-stroke Briggs & Stratton engine used to power go-karts, gas-powered wood splitters, riding lawn mowers or mud-motors on duck boats.

鈥淲hat we do in the labs at Stout carries over into our internships and careers,鈥 he said. His lab experiences prepared him for his internship as a quality engineer with General Motors, in Bowling Green, Ky.

Small engine parts on a worktable

Teams take pictures on their phones and pull up diagrams of engines on their laptops for visual aids to remember the placement of the components as they remove them one by one. It is not an easy puzzle to disassemble. The organized chaos of discarded bolts, springs and valves begins to line the worktables.

Mechanical engineering students disassembling a small engine

Another team works to remove a flywheel, a machine component that preserves rotational inertia within the engine. Gavin Tschida, a fourth-year student from St. Paul, concentrates on pushing the flywheel loose from one end of the crankshaft while steadying the component with his other hand. 鈥淚 chose mechanical engineering because it covers a wide variety of the field and gives me a lot of career options, like product development,鈥 he said, without taking his eyes from the task at hand.

A close-up photo of students hands working on a small engine

So, where 黑料社区. that familiar smell you鈥檝e been searching for? And where are the students wandering off to and returning with all of these tools?

Berg, who has an engineering tattoo on his left tricep鈥攁 gear tattoo鈥攅merges from a side room with more spring compressors. The Tool Room. Here 黑料社区. the smell you鈥檝e been searching for鈥攖he warm, earthy scent of motor oil and metal.

A close-up of students hands working on a small engine

Six metal cabinets are lined with screwdrivers, micrometers, hammers, mallets, pliers, wrenches, files鈥攁 mechanic 黑料社区. tool shop. Anything and everything a mechanical engineer might need to get a motor running.


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