Middle School Robotics Receives Build Award at the 2014 VEX Robotics World Championships

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Chaminade’s middle school Eagle Engineering Team 83 was recognized with the Build Award at the 2014 VEX Robotics World Championships held at the Anaheim Convention Center in April. The VEX World Championships is the largest robotics competition of its kind with 760 teams from 25 countries participating in a four-day international tournament.

Throughout the 2013-2014 season, Team 83 dedicated themselves to constantly improving the robot that they built early in the season and successfully competed in several tournaments.

The Build Award is given to the team that builds a well-crafted and constructed a robot that has a professional feel and quality look, with clear attention to detail in construction, efficient use of mechanical and electronic components, safety and reliability on the competition field. Special mention was made to the team’s intricate scissor lift design and its unique lift drive gearbox, the team structure with succession planning built in, and the detail put into documenting their design in their engineering notebook.

Key Criteria:
1) Robot construction was of professional quality; robust, clean and elegant use of materials
2) Robot efficiently used mechanical and electrical components
3) Robot was designed with detailed attention to the hazards and rigors of the competition
4) Teamwork and interview quality

This award caps one of most successful seasons in Chaminade’s middle school robotics’ eight year history.

Chaminade Robotics Team Undefeated in Colorado Tournament Win

4-6-2014 Denver, COBy Annette Stone ’16

Chaminade College Preparatory’s Eagle Engineering robotics team swept the FIRST Robotics Colorado Regional competition this weekend, winning seventeen straight matches to take the tournament and qualify for the World Championship in St. Louis April 23 -26. They were also honored with the General Motors Industrial Design Award, “Celebrating form and function in an efficiently designed machine that effectively addresses the game challenge.”

The three-day tournament was attended by 15 current Eagle Engineering students and four mentors; joined by four former teammates now attending The University of Colorado. The team, and their 2014 robot named Legacy had to overcome stiff challenges to reach this level of success. Starting in January, all of the 63-member team had to design and build a robot to play a unique new game called Aerial Assist and they had to have it completed in only six weeks. With the official competition robot finished and sealed at the deadline, the team completed a duplicate machine to give them four weeks of preparation and practice before their first tournament in Long Beach, California.

At the event in Long Beach, the robot was plagued with technical problems and poor performance. The team was disappointed but not discouraged by their 55th place finish there. They rebounded with new efforts to learn from their mistakes and engineer solutions to the robot’s problems. With the official machine re-sealed and shipped to Denver, the team relied on their duplicate robot, Legacy II to rework the design and practice. Upon arrival at the competition, the pit crew had only one day to access Legacy and apply changes while teammates scouted other teams, prepared strategies and presented to judges roaming the pit area.

Matches started on Thursday as judges continued to converse with each team, evaluating their engineering, community service, and team spirit. All of the 52 teams competing in Colorado were randomly grouped into three-team alliances for each of 11 qualifying matches, giving schools a chance to compete with and against each other throughout the day. On the first day, Team 1138 held top spots and ended up finishing with eight wins and zero losses. This was due in large part by clutch play from their senior drive team of Nick Kureghian ’14, Collin Lane ’14, Sasha Kurkuoglu ’14 and Matthew Nagle ’14. As the second day of the competition rolled around, the team began to draw double-team defense and hard hits with little time between matches to make repairs. Off the field, judges made their last rounds and final selection for team awards.

For the finals, the top eight teams hand-picked their alliance partners for the best-of-three elimination rounds. The Eagles chose teams from Rockwall, Texas and San Diego, California to finish the job. The trio remained lossless despite the higher level of competition from other carefully assembled alliances. In the end, Team 1138 prevailed by working together and upholding the FIRST Robotics principle of Gracious Professionalism as they brought home more hardware for their growing trophy shelves.

Eagle Engineering’s Corporate Sponsors include Aerojet/Rocketdyne, Xerox, Medtronic and Boeing.

VEX Robotics Team 83 qualify for the 2014 World Robotic Competition

MS- RoboticsMiddle School Vex Robotics Team 83 brought home two prestigious awards, the Design Award and the Judges Award, after two days of competition at the California Middle School Vex Robotics State Championships. The competition featured 27 middle school teams and was held at California’s Great American Amusement Park, in Santa Clara, California.

The Design Award earned Team 83 a berth at the Vex World Championships.  The World Championships will be held at the Anaheim Convention Center April 23 through 26, and typically includes 160 middle school teams from more than 20 countries.

Team members are Catherine Campbell, Connor Davis, Christian Gideon, Captain Noah Hosaka, Chris Mansourian, Jasmine Quan, Nate Raft and Elana Wadhwani.

MS Robotics Wins Excellence Award at CAMS VEX Tournament

Team 83The middle school Eagle Engineers, Team 83, won the prestigious Excellence Award at the CAMS VEX Robotics Tournament held in Carson on Saturday, December 7.

This is Team 83’s third major award in two tournaments, over the past two weeks. The Excellence Award is given to the team with the best overall performance during the tournament. The team was chosen out of 31 other local middle school teams. Judges specifically cited Team 83 for their:

  1. Documentation of excellent engineering principles in their notebook
  2. Providing pictures showing evidence of teamwork.
  3. Displaying impressive project management in having each member with assigned tasks and roles
  4. Excellent robot design with unique features like dual-linear slider scissor lift, hanging capabilities and a switch to change from one program to another.
  5. A robot that performed very well during the competition.

Congratulations Team 83!

Middle School Robotics Wins VEX Tournament

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Just before the Thanksgiving break, on Saturday, November 23, Chaminade’s middle school Eagle Engineers, Team 83, were named Tournament Champions at the Granada Hills Charter High School VEX Toss Up Competition.

Team 83 faced a field of more than 30 high schools and five middle schools, and the second ranked El Camino Real High School alliance picked them as partners. Together, they swept through the quarterfinal and semifinal matches and won 2-1 against the top-ranked alliance from James Monroe and El Camino Real High Schools. This win automatically qualifies Team 83 for the California Vex Robotics Competition State Championships to be held in Santa Clara, March 14-16, 2014.

Team 83 also walked away with the Judges Award. This award is given to the team that the judges feel deserve special recognition not only for their performance during the event, but for their accomplishments and endeavors through the season.

In general, middle school teams rarely win high school tournaments, and this historic victory marks the first time Team 83 has won such a competitive championship.