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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 91porn视频.A team of Pitt engineers will put their know-how 鈥 and nascent dance skills 鈥 on display for thousands of spectators this Saturday at the Red Bull Flugtag.
The event kicks off at 10 a.m. on the North Shore as part of the EQT Pittsburgh Three Rivers Regatta.
Flugtag (pronounced FLOOG-TOG) translates to 鈥渇lying day鈥 in German and is a chance for aspiring aviators to put their skills and humor to the test. Teams participating in the Flugtag will be graded on three things: flight distance, craft creativity and showmanship.
Ryan Blair, a 2017 mechanical engineering alumnus of the Swanson School of Engineering, said the Pitt team has dubbed itself the Roc-ettes 鈥 a play on the Panther mascot鈥檚 nickname and the Rockettes, the popular high-kicking precision dance ensemble.
鈥淲e started watching YouTube videos of Flugtag competitions and wanted to capture the showmanship. We thought, what鈥檚 Pitt related?鈥 Blair said. 聽
The team considered the Cathedral of Learning or Benedum Hall for inspiration, but then went to athletics and landed on Roc. As for the 鈥揺tte? 鈥淔or our introduction video聽that we made, we did a little bit of the kicking and line dancing,鈥 Blair said. The Roc-ettes are Blair and Pitt engineering students聽Rina Zhang, Nicholas Bertani, Chad Foster, Paul Gatto, Theo Schwarz and Mason Lazarcheff.
They鈥檒l be competing among 37 teams, including others with Pittsburgh-inspired names such as Mr. Rogers鈥 Friendly Skies and Peng-Wings, a 鈥淪tanley Cup-powered鈥 craft.
The Roc-ettes will push their homemade flying machine off a 22-foot-high flight deck without the help of engines or external power sources, which are not allowed in the competition. One pilot must remain in the craft as it sails off the edge over the Allegheny River.
鈥淲e used principles, basic engineering aspects 鈥 simplifying design, making sure it鈥檚 safe, and finding suppliers and vendors 鈥 that鈥檚 everything we learned in school, and we鈥檙e applying that,鈥 Blair said.
Pitt Aero, a student group for engineers interested in aerospace, was instrumental in the team鈥檚 ability to enter the competition. The group focuses on research, design and manufacturing of radio-controlled planes, in order to compete in events such as the Society of Automotive Engineers annual aerospace competition, Blair said. Pitt Aero also builds smaller unmanned, 100-inch wingspan planes for the society's heavy-lift competition, mainly using balsa and aluminum.
For the Red Bull Flugtag, however, the team had to go a little bigger than 100 inches.
鈥淚t turns out it鈥檚 a hugely different problem to design a 24-foot wing to carry a whole person and aim for distance,鈥 said聽Schwarz, a senior mechanical engineering student. 鈥淥n the engineering side, it meant learning a lot from scratch.鈥
Creating the craft
Blair gave a technical rundown of what the team went through to come up with its craft.
鈥淲e start off by estimating our takeoff velocity and weight, then idealize a free body diagram applying expected drag and lift forces to see how the plane would fly,鈥 Blair said.
鈥淣ext, we optimize the plane to increase stability and lift and reduce drag,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hile doing this, we design for manufacturability and transportation.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檙e not just winging it,鈥 Blair said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e actually going through the engineering calculations.鈥
鈥淭he Swanson School has been great in helping with resources in terms of equipment, vendors to order from and professors to help when we had questions,鈥 he continued. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been very supportive.鈥
Schwarz said that while a mechanical engineering degree is a great background, the specifics of designing this craft were brand new to the team.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I鈥檓 doing it. This is a chance for me to prove if I have what it takes to design an aircraft 鈥 if all the research and engineering background is enough to make a product that works,鈥 Schwarz said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檒l find out on Saturday."
See how they did in our coverage of the event.