South Dakota
Mines VexU Robotics team will host a regional VEX robotic competition, called the
Robot Rumble, for more than 20 high school teams from across South Dakota, Colorado and
surrounding states. The match will take place in the Goodell Gym on the South
Dakota Mines campus in the King Center starting at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Feb.
11. Members of the Mines VexU team will be on hand to speak with interested
media outlets during the competition. The final round of the competition is
expected to take place after 3 p.m. with awards presentation in the late
afternoon.
VEX robotic competitions are organized
around the world each year and are open to students of all ages. VEX tournaments
involve student teams who build and program robots to compete against each
other in pre-set challenges.
Mines own VexU team has a strong
track record, including placing among the top teams world in past international
competitions. Deon Estebo is a mechanical engineering major at South Dakota
Mines and VexU team captain. He is proud to play a role in inspiring the next
generation of students who will lead the way in building the high-tech
infrastructure of tomorrow. “Honestly, I think our team outreach is the most
important thing we do,” says Estebo. “I really enjoy hosting these high school competitions.
I agree that STEM fields can improve the world, and this is a great recruitment
tool to get young people interested in these important careers.”
The basic premise of this year’s 6-12th
grade Vex challenge tasks students to design and build robots that can
pick up a set of disks on a 12x12 foot court and shoot the disks into goals.
The game, called “Spin Up,” includes two robots on the court competing against
each other to gather a limited set of disks and score the most goals. “The game
is different each year, so you are always trying to do a new competition and
that keeps it fresh,” says Estebo.
Mines students will also volunteer to help at the
statewide high school level Vex competition set to take place at Douglas
Highschool in March. The university team has a mentorship program set up with
Douglas High School. Last year the team completed more than 500 hours of
combined community volunteerism in outreach events with various schools.
Mines VexU team members are returning some
impressive results at their own university level competitions. The team placed
5th in the world in a recent virtual event. They also won top honors
at the Arizona State Polytechnic University VEXU Competition in early February.
The team went undefeated with an 8-0 record throughout the day and took home
the championship award along with the robot skills award and the overall excellence
award. Estebo says Mines VexU is gearing up for the world championship coming
up later this spring. “We take university students of all levels to our
competitions. First year freshmen travel alongside the seniors. This way we build
team experience and depth,” says Estebo.
As he speaks, his teammates in the nearby practice
area are running two robots that are gobbling up soft yellow foam disks at
breakneck speeds and accurately shooting them into goals. Building and
programming robots from the ground up to efficiently complete complex tasks is
no easy chore. The Mines team begin working on design ideas for their own
collegiate level robots last May. The team then completed a flurry of robot
building activity over the holiday break. “We were in the lab every day for nine
hours a day during the last few weeks of winter break to get these finished,”
says Estebo.
Estebo recently completed a summer internship with the
company Whirlpool, and he brought that real-world experience back to help this
team. “The R&D we did at Whirlpool, testing and retesting over and over
again, was really valuable and applicable here in our effort to build robots
that have a chance at competing on the world stage,” he says.
The Mines VexU team advisor, Aaron Lalley, Ph.D., who
teaches in the university’s mechanical engineering department, says he’s very
proud of the team for representing the university at the collegiate level and
for all the volunteer work they do to outreach to the next generation. “They
are a great team in every way,” says Lalley. “This team has significant
representation from every department on campus and they have set the standard
for team autonomy and professionalism.”