Students reflect on lessons learned at UAV competition

Monday, July 11, 2022

Members of student team WARG (蓝莓视频 Aerial Robotics Team) confer while competing at an event in Manitoba in May.

Members of student team WARG (蓝莓视频 Aerial Robotics Team) confer while competing at an event in聽Manitoba.

This article was originally published on the Faculty of Engineering's news site.

Members of a University of 蓝莓视频 student team with a strong engineering contingent didn鈥檛 snag any hardware, but they still came home with valuable lessons from a recent competition for unmanned aerial vehicles.

罢丑别听聽was one of seven university teams from across Canada to put their entries to the test at the聽聽in Southport, Manitoba in May.

Eight members of student team WARG attended a recent UAV competition in Manitoba.
In only their second year of participation, members of the 90-student team were pleased to successfully complete both competition tasks 鈥 one involving the disposal of a hazardous package and the other detecting intruders within a designated perimeter.

鈥淲e came here to learn and to collect data, and we did just that,鈥 said Sahil Kale, the team鈥檚 technical director and pilot. 鈥淚鈥檓 proud of us for getting in the air both days.鈥

Lessons learned ranged from the importance of having clear areas of responsibility to reduce confusing communication among team members, to having more spare parts on hand to handle inevitable repairs.

WARG, which draws more than three-quarters of its members from engineering programs, had the only unmanned vehicle system in the competition that was developed entirely in-house. Over half of members are in their first or second years of study.

鈥淲hether we succeed or fail in competition, the goal is to ensure that students leave the team with technical skills and memorable experiences that they take with them after graduation,鈥 said Jenny Luo, the team鈥檚 business lead.

Members on the contest team, dubbed Project Vanguard, were Sahil Kale, Jenny Luo, Ryan Dullaert, Aidan Bowers, Matt Visser, Brielle Chenier, Anthony Luo and Daniel Puratich.

The competition is meant to promote and develop Canadian expertise and experience in unmanned aerial systems technologies.