A different energy shift
With the absence of Hauger, Mark, lil Mark, Keith, and Jerry P, the downstairs shops are a little lonely. There is this great space in the middle of Ron's shop. Sometimes you see Daniel Moore just walking around in circles where the GTM used to lay. It is a little sad.
Trust me though when I say that we have enough work to keep us from any nostalgia, that is an understatement. And when I say that we had enough drama in our lives over the past couple days to sell out Broadway, that is an understatement.
Yet, the cars are working. The West Philly Hybrid X Team is doing very well in Michigan. The GTM passed the speed test. Tomorrow, Simon and company will try the Ford Focus again. Ann is keeping everyone updated with emails and tweets in the middle of all her runs to the hardware store and auto shops. I would love to see Edison 2's four cars at the Speedway. They sound amazing. Four cars! What an incredible accomplishment.
The thing is, the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize is accomplishing everything they set out to do. You have engineers, mechanics, thinkers, businessmen and women coming together to talk cars. This competition sparked this need for innovative hybrid technology and powerful business plans. Many people are taking notice. This competition has done so much for this team that it doesn't seem real at times. Three students will speak on Friday at MIT about the future of sustainability energy. Ten days ago, another four students were part of a panel at Saint Joseph's University discussing the educational benefits a CTE curriculum fosters at an urban school. Boeing Wind Tunnel opened its doors for us to test the areodynamics of our cars. We truly are fortunate to work with such wonderful and accomplished companies and universities as if it is the norm now.
I am very excited to take three students, Azeem, Daniel, and Sekou to Boston with Maurice Williams. I cannot imagine the electricity on that campus. As a former rower at Saint Joseph's, the women's team was always jealous of the men's team when they went to Boston to row on the Charles River. I have never seen the Charles River. I can imagine its a beautiful river.
Keep updated with the mechanics and engineers in Michigan through out twitter account. Make sure to follow the students in Boston as the present our essential question, "How do you educate urban youth for the green economy?"
Two answers: compete in nationally prestigious competitions and implement a strong CTE curriculum.
Ride or Die
Ms. R
Boeing Wind Tunnel
Last Saturday, the West Philly Hybrid X Team went to the Boeing Wnd Tunnel to test the aerodynamics of the Factory Five GTM kit car. It was a long day but full of good results and information.
It all started around 6 o 'clock in the morning when Hauger came to get myself, Justin Clarke, and Justin Carter from our house and met up with everybody else at school waiting to to leave. Approximately around 6:35 a.m. we arrived at the Boeing Wind Tunnel. We waited for Mr. Boeing to come and escort us into the building. Once we got in the building, he gave us a tour of everything. It was amazing to see all the computers and machines to run the testing.
We met up with the rest of his crew, and they explained to us on what we were going to do. They wanted us to be as hands-on as possible and we did a lot of work. It was only 7:20 and we were already testing and working on the GTM. We were assigned jobs liker eording data, typing everything we did while moving the GTM, fix camera angles, and run back and forth to get tools.
We changed different things on the car like remodeling the hood of the car and removing other parts that we thought were going to cause our car to preform less then what it was doing already. We did that for the first six hours then we went on our lunch break. After 20 minutes or so, we were back at work again because nobody wanted to sit around and do nothing when we knew we came to get a job done.
In the final hour we had enough time to do two more tests. We knew the more tests we ran, the better our car will be so we pushed ourselves to get a third test in. After the time was done, Mr. Boeing walked us around the rest of the building and showed us what they used to test the aerodynamics on the airplanes and helicopters. By then it was time to leave so we packed up and said our thank yous to everybody for helping us. I think the team learned a lot. We are understanding more what causes drag and what parts are necessary for our car to perform well.
Well that's all for now...
Daniel Moore
Our Ridiculous Adventure
We did it. It’s ridiculous, but we did it. It had to be done. We had to complete both cars and drive each of them 100 miles by March 30, or we would be eliminated from the X PRIZE. We also had to submit our third technical report, photos and video.
On April 2, we learned that our technical report was accepted and that we now move on to the Shakedown Stage of the Progressive Automotive X PRIZE. That means we’re on our way to the Michigan International Speedway on April 24 for a week of on-track technical and safety testing.
Getting to Michigan has been completely and totally ridiculous. It’s so ridiculous I don’t know where to start, but I guess the beginning of the year is as good as any. To start off the New Year, we switched the batteries in our cars. I don’t mean we took out a car battery from Sears and put in one from Pep Boys. I mean we replaced our we-love-this-lithium-iron-phosphate-battery-pack with a pack that has an entirely different chemistry from an entirely different manufacturer. This also meant we needed new battery boxes.
This too, was ridiculous. We had to replace the perfectly lovely milk crates we’d been using as battery boxes with aluminum boxes fabricated by the manufacturer. (BTW, between the milk crates and the new boxes, we built about 4 different iterations of battery boxes, although we always seemed to revert to the milk crates.) Then we had to take the boxes out to have brackets welded to them. Then we drove the boxes back to the International Battery in Allentown. We did all this running around so we would have our batteries and battery management system installed in the cars by March 1 so we would have plenty of time to complete all our technical testing. That was delusional.
You know what else was ridiculous? The weather. Philadelphia had 78.7 inches of snow this winter. We had more snow than Boston, Chicago and Anchorage. Every time we needed to be in school working on the cars, school was closed. Some snow days were really bad. On some of those days Simon, who is the most ridiculous of all, drove through the city, picked up kids and went to school. There were also the two ridiculous snow days when we waited – at home – for the storm that never came. We lost so much time from school that the Philadelphia School District cancelled the first two days of spring break. Are you kidding me? That’s what the kids were saying. The teachers were grumbling. Simon committed to a family vacation for the entirety of spring break or face divorce. I declared that I didn’t give a damn what Arlene Ackerman said, I was taking my spring break. I must now publically apologize to Dr. Ackerman and thank her for giving us the extra time to finish the cars.
School was supposed to be over for all of us on Friday March 26. Our cars would be built, we’d have already driven them and Simon would write the technical report on the weekend. We’d get our report in way before the deadline. What an insane notion. On Tuesday, our batteries were still in Allentown.
The batteries and a large flock of engineers installed the batteries and the battery management on Wednesday. That gave us a beautiful warm day to drive the cars on Thursday. We got the Focus to the lot first. It drove like a charm. Then the GT arrived and it looked great. It drove great – for about a lap. Then it started making horrific noises. We tried to diagnose the problem at the lot. We had come without a proper set of tools, so we used a lug wrench, a fence post and rebar as a hammer. They really didn’t work all that well, so we hauled the car back to school where we found that we had, apparently, ruined our fancy-ass Audi transmission.
After 2 ½ years of work, the idea of transmission problems knocking us out of the X PRIZE was staring us in the face. What an ignoble way to exit. Fortunately, we found another transmission in Texas and had it shipped overnight. It arrived on Saturday morning March 27, a day school would have been shut up tighter than a drum had it not been for the weather in February. We split our team of students and teachers with a small group of us going to the lot with the Focus to continue counting laps and recording video and the rest installing the new transmission in the GT. I even got to drive the Focus.
The new transmission was installed, the GT went on the lift and was started. NO! The same noise. The crew disassembled the transmission and put it together again. On this assembly, which was not by the book, Justin Clarke dropped a piece of equipment on the housing, denting it. Now we’re not sure if this bizarre accident was the reason, but the transmission stopped making the horror movie noises. We got it to the lot and spun off our laps.
This will be the last fact I relate about our adventure. It was about 30 degrees colder on Saturday than Thursday, and because we were so short of time, we compiled our laps on the GT without the body in place, which meant we did not have lights. Drivers, in long underwear, hats, hoodies and gloves rotated through driving assignments until we ran out of daylight. We got the final 35 miles on Sunday. We are even happier to report that Simon made it to his spring vacation and remains happily married.
We hope you will continue to follow our great and ridiculous adventure.
Friday School?
Today, we have to open up the suspension components in the Ford. It makes the car handle better. We put more weight on the car. The batteries in the back will weigh 300 lbs. The suspension has 300 lbs to maneuver. In order for the Ford to have suspension and a proper frame, we are adding a sway bar in the back.
We still have so much to do.
Get Rich or Die trying.
Justin Clarke.
Looking In
When I first started my secondary education courses, nothing that was found in a textbook compared to the student-teaching observations. You would read about the pros and cons of whole language, the various scenarios of ideal classroom management, and how to find all my boyfriends, Piaget, Maslow, Bloom, and Erikson, in the students' learning patterns. But it wasn't until my first rounds of student-teaching observations and later in my first year teaching when I realized that I could know my textbooks cover and cover, and I still not know what to do with a pissed off teenager. Maybe Maslow and Bloom would do a better job than I would the first time around, but no one can say for real.
Looking into Preiss' shop from his classroom, reminds me so much of how important it is to be in the moment of learning. At 5:15 p.m. on a Monday, there are seven students working in the shop with Preiss, Dilossi, Simon, and Mark. Mark is a self-employed specialist of the GTM. He started working with the team a week ago. He fits right in. He works well with the students in explaining the steps for the kit car. Every now and then you hear, "shut up, shut up" from the students, which is a good thing.
These students are in the ideal situation. They are learning something in theory and actually seeing how it works in practice. Sometimes, I would find myself cringe reading the best practices of the classroom. It just wouldn't work in reality. Middle school and high school are the most difficult part of one's upbringing. There is absolutely no textbook that contains all the right material. You can't find the answers unless you are actually in the moment.
Within minutes, the students working in the shop confront problems and delays in putting together the GTM. Poor Justin Clarke, he hurt his finger. Justin Carter had to measure and remeasure the headlight and nose of the car. Daniel is remodeling the harness for the Ford.
"I have completely assembled both headlights and started working on mounting them on the nose. I had to think of different ways of tearing the fiberglass on the frame of the car to fit the molds of the headlights. I broke it. I broke one screw on the corner when I was drilling. Luckily, three screws would be enough to hold the frame in place. So I lucked up on that end." -from Justin Carter
Despite the setbacks, they are accomplishing a lot. It is amazing to see what they did to the GTM just within the last week. You know it is a good day when the shop smells like a campfire from the welding. More parts are needed to order. More wrenchs are needed for harnassing. More hours are needed to prove theories wrong.
Ride or Die
Ms. R
Working Hard for the Weekend
As of January 4, the team and I are working in the shop to finish the EVX GT kit car for the Philadelphia Car Show. We are pushing it to the deadline.
My job, as the leader of the mechanical team, is to begin building and putting together the doors for our car. When I am done, I will attach them to the frame, but as of now, I still have to install all of the components into the interior of the door and panel. Sometimes, the shop smells like it is on fire from all the welding. Sometimes, I actually think it is.
For the rest of my teammates, their job is to place and center the electric motor in the right position of the GT frame. I hope they do not drop it. As soon as that is done, the diesel engine has to put together with the transmission and mounted in the car. That is the most time consuming task, because if anything is out of line or inverted, it will not work.
The most consistent problem is the debate on the color of the car. We didn’t have that much difficult picking out the size of the radiator exhaust fan or engine coolant, but this is way more serious. Many of my peers want the school colors (I could care less about that) and others would like a sleek black car. I am still undecided.
It may sound like a whole lot, but February is so close. We have to have both cars running and ready for action by February 1st. All of this is a lot, but are essential to getting to “VICTORY!” We are on our way, and we can do so well. I did not leave the shop on Tuesday and Thursday until 7 p.m. We still have a lot to accomplish, but we have motivation from our teachers and instructors. We will have no problem finishing the car.
Ride or Die



