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About the SAE Aero East Competition

"The SAE Aero Design competition is intended to provide undergraduate and graduate engineering students with a real-life engineering challenge. The competition has been designed to provide exposure to the kinds of situations that engineers face in their real-life work environment. First and foremost a design competition, students will find themselves performing trade studies and making compromises to arrive at a design solution that will optimally meet the mission requirements while still conforming to the configuration limitations.

The importance of interpersonal communication skills is sometimes overlooked, yet both written and oral communication skills are vital in the engineering workplace. To help teams develop these skills, a high percentage of a team's score is devoted to the design report and the oral presentation required in the competition.

SAE Aero Design features three classes of competition-Regular, Advanced, and Micro. Regular Class continues to be the class with the purpose to develop the fundamental understanding of flight. We recommended Regular Class for first year teams interested in competing. Advanced Class requires teams to have a systems approach to the design while integrating several engineering disciplines: aeronautical, mechanical, electrical, and computer engineers. The ultimate end goal for this class is autonomous flight with a "purpose" decided every year by rules committee members. Micro Class teams are required to make trades between two potentially conflicting requirements, carrying the highest payload fraction possible, while simultaneously pursuing the lowest empty weight possible."

-Society of Automotive Engineers

Micro Class

The SAE Aero Design East Micro Class competition requires that a  remote controlled (RC) plane can fit inside a cardboard box with the inner dimensions of 11.875” x 3.375” x 13.635”. Wings, fuselage, and tail section all need to be designed and assembled to make a plane ready for competition. A foam cutter was assembled to make wings out of foam to test alongside the other designs of wings. Multiple wing designs and airfoils were looked at to select the best possible for the job. Trial testing will be conducted to make sure that the plane is able to stay together during flight and ground impact at the end of each run. In the future there will need to be practice constructing and throwing the plane for competition and obtaining results on how the different materials and assemblies work together.

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