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Rowers get help engineering podium push, as UVic students work on training machine

Rowing sa国际传媒 athletes are looking to reach the podium. The University of Victoria faculty of engineering is working on a way to get them there. Not on Elk Lake, but in the classroom.
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Charles Alexander trains with Rowing sa国际传媒 as a member of the NextGen team and a potential future Olympian.

Rowing sa国际传媒 athletes are looking to reach the podium. The University of Victoria faculty of engineering is working on a way to get them there. Not on Elk Lake, but in the classroom.

The need comes because of an aging rowing machine that is no longer manufactured, but which Rowing sa国际传媒 still finds useful for identifying raw power in potential recruits.

The funding came through a grant from the RBC Training Ground program, which looks to uncover potential young Canadian sporting talent for future Olympics.

鈥淲e use the machines as an important part of our ID process, but they are getting old and breaking down,鈥 said Samantha Heron, assistant coach with Rowing sa国际传媒 and UVic, with an emphasis on Next Generation rower development with the former.

Although Concept 2 stopped manufacturing the C2 Dyno machine 13 years ago, Rowing sa国际传媒 still swears by it. But the organization鈥檚 old machines are now breaking down and are difficult to fix.

鈥淣ext Gen coaching involves a lot of talent identification work, so we are always carting around these C2 Dyno machines because that is what we鈥檝e always used,鈥 said Heron.

鈥淲e started thinking maybe we should build our own machines. But I鈥檓 a rowing coach and not an engineer. So I reached out across the country for anyone interested in designing a replacement prototype. We are looking for a design that can be manufactured.鈥

Heron got a bite almost immediately.

鈥淸UVic faculty of engineering development co-ordinator] Anna Kobb got back to me quickly,鈥 Heron said.

It has become the summer term project for the UVic fourth-year mechanical engineering class.

鈥淚t all came together naturally,鈥 said Kobb.

鈥淭his course is literally about design. This provided our students with an actual client we can talk to and dig into the process with. It is a perfect fit. The class is about 30聽students and we have four teams working on it. We believe we can take this to the next level.鈥

Kobb described it as a 鈥渃omplex challenge鈥 that gets the students 鈥渋nvolved in mechanics, biomechanics, kinesology, portable design and technology for a real client, right on campus.鈥

Heron said she envisions applications in all sports that require an early and measurable identification of physical power.

鈥淚 can see lots of uses for this machine across various sports. Rugby would be one example,鈥 she said.

Complicating matters is that schooling at UVic is currently being done online because of the pandemic, with only some lab work allowed in-person.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of online work, via Zoom, but it鈥檚 going well,鈥 said Kobb.

That is OK for the design phase. It is hoped more hands-on will be allowed in the fall and winter terms when nuts and bolts have to be put together to build a prototype that functions, not only theoretically on a computer screen, but the real world of metal and steel in which mechanical engineering functions.

鈥淭his is an exciting project for us in bringing together sport and engineering,鈥 said Kobb.

Rowing sa国际传媒 was among nine national sport organizations to receive grants of between $10,000 and $30,000 this year from the RBC Training Ground program. National sports organizations were asked to submit proposals. The Rowing sa国际传媒/UVic proposal was among the nine accepted.

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