Skip to main content

Drawing a crowd at PIR

ASU student engineers don't have a full car, but they do have a full tent as motorsports fans check out their progress


A crowd looks at the in-progress car being built by ASU students.
April 05, 2016

Editor’s note: This is the latest installation in a yearlong series about ASU's Formula SAEFormula SAE is a student design competition organized by the International Society of Automotive Engineers (now known as SAE International). team. Find links to previous stories at the end of this article.

Well, they didn't have a completed car to do a pace lap, but the student engineers building a Formula-style car for competition in Nebraska did make it to Phoenix International Raceway this weekend.

Motorsports fans were drawn to the club's tents at PIR, where their in-progress car was displayed, along with a race simulator that drew participants young and old.

After the moment of respite, it's back to the workshop for these students, who have a race car to finish and test before the national competition in June.

Previous stories in this series:

Oct. 14: Tempe Drift: How an underdog student engineering team is building a race car from the ground up.

Nov. 4: Racing time and money to build a fast car.

Dec. 10: Braking bad: Pressure is on for ASU student engineers building race car

Dec. 17: No brake: ASU team powers through to edge closer to race car

Feb. 1: Coming into the home stretch

March 8: Starting to look like a car

March 29: One step closer to PIR

March 31: Going full throttle for PIR

More Science and technology

 

Palo Verde Blooms

Associate professor shares her journey from NASA to ASU

From leading space missions to designing and building spaceflight hardware and training students in space science and engineering, Arizona State University is proving that space is more than a…

A crowd observes G. Don Taylor speak in a classroom

Famed systems engineer inspires ASU to tackle global problems

“Providing great talent with great opportunity can make a great difference.” Such was a key part of the message delivered by G. Don Taylor, executive vice provost and the Charles O. Gordon Professor…

Stock photo of woman with head in hands and stress drawings displayed around her

The science behind chronic stress

Stress comes in many shapes and sizes. There’s the everyday stress of preparing for a final exam or being stuck in traffic. And the more significant stress of losing a friend, family member,…