Morpheus Lab  
 
search




Design lead Alex Wang

Design lead Alex Wang

 

The University of Maryland (UMD) Autonomous Micro Air Vehicle (AMAV) team took second place in this year’s Vertical Flight Society (VFS) Design-Build-Vertical-Flight Competition. The team’s preliminary design report was also among the top five highest scoring during the competition.

The VFS annual remote-control and autonomous, electric-powered vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) competition seeks to encourage student interest in unmanned aircraft technology, and small air vehicle design and fabrication. The competition is designed to develop hands-on skills and familiarization with electric VTOL and advanced air mobility (AAM) technology at the university student level, helping to prepare the next generation of engineers and leaders to push the limits of this exciting technology into the future.

The UMD team’s competition entry, Horizon, leveraged a tailsitter design, which means the vehicle takes off and lands on its tail, versus more traditional horizontally oriented vehicles. While the team wanted their design to be successful in the competition, they also wanted to emphasize uniqueness and incorporate the latest manufacturing technologies.

As part of the competition, the team’s final vehicle was tested for agility and endurance through successfully completing as many laps as possible on a predetermined course in under ten minutes. In addition, the drone had to perform a full VTOL landing at both the beginning and end of each lap.

This year’s flyoff was hosted by SURVICE Engineering, and held at the Harford County Airport in Churchville, Maryland, on June 6–8.

“The long-range endurance course in this year’s event pushed teams to consider out of the box UAS configurations,” said Dr. Jason K. Cornelius, the DBVF Program Director, in a VFS press release. “Combining challenging tailsitter and lift + cruise configurations with high on-site winds presented a truly real-world test environment for the students. I was greatly impressed by the ingenuity and resilience of the students and am looking forward to the continued growth of the event.”

AMAV’s VFS competition team is advised by Professor Derek Paley and Joshua Gaus, a project engineer for UMD’s UAS Research and Operations Center, and included graduate and undergraduate students from across aerospace, mechanical and robotics programs. Aerospace engineering Ph.D. student Animesh Shastry served as the team lead, while mechanical engineering undergrad Alex Wang served as the design lead for the drone.

VFS awarded a total of $5,000 in cash prizes to schools in the competition this year. UMD received $1000 for 2nd place.

To learn more about UMD’s AMAV team, visit amav.umd.edu.



Related Articles:
Seven UMD Students Receive Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships
A New Spin on a Classic da Vinci Design
Engineering Students Twice Victorious at International Rotorcraft Design Competition
Seven Maryland Students Receive Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships
Three UMD Students Named Among Aviation Week Network’s Class of 2024 20 Twenties
UMD Student Team Advances in UAS Competition
Are you ready to compete in the e-Bike student challenge?
UMD Students Win Poster Session at NASA's Thermal and Fluids Analysis Workshop
Gamera Team Blows Away Its Own Record
Two National Records for Gamera

June 29, 2023


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Engineering Students Fabricate Tomorrow’s Solutions Today

Alum Appointed Space Domain Lead for AIAA

UMD Team Advances in NIST UAS 5.0 Competition, Wins Three Best in Class Awards

When Vision Fails, a Suit Could Steer Pilots to Safety

Celebrating Asian, Pacific Islander, and Desi American Engineers

Celebrating Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month: Karenna Buco

UMD Student Awarded Wings Foundation Scholarship

UMD Eclipse Ballooning a Success

Seven Maryland Students Receive Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships

Eclipse Ballooning: Phenomenon Provides Rare Opportunities

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home aero umd NIA NASA