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| Flow-detection system, bicycle frame take top honors in invention competition |
Katie Plzak won first prize in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity for her Visual Flow Regime Detection System. (Large image) |
Aaron Bland won first place in the Tong Prototype Prize competition for his full suspension bicycle frame. He also won a fourth-place prize in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity competition. (Large image) |
A computer-based imaging system that enables researchers to evaluate conditions when a vapor and a liquid flow together through a pipeline took top honors and $10,000 in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity, an annual innovation competition held on the UW-Madison campus. Chemical engineering senior Katie Plzak developed the system.
"The AB-1," a full-suspension bicycle frame for serious mountain-bike racers, demonstrated a shock-absorbing system for the rear wheel. The invention and prototype, designed and built by mechanical engineering senior Aaron Bland, won first place and $2,500 in the Tong Prototype Prize competition. Bland's invention also tied for fourth place in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity.
The winners were chosen from a field of 15 ideas and inventions, including a tent that enabled its occupants to sleep under the stars and a solar-powered smoke detector, exhibited and displayed during Innovation Day, held Feb. 10 on the UW-Madison College of Engineering campus. Both competitions award cash prizes to those whose ideas are judged most creative, novel, innovative and likely to succeed in the marketplace.
Seth GaleWyrick, Chester McDonald and Travis Wiltzius took second place in both the Schoofs Prize for Creativity and Tong Prototype Prize for "Wing Nut," an adjustable passive-protection device used in rock climbing. The device mounts in a range of rock crack sizes. (Large image) |
"Releasable Wakeboard Binding," a wakeboard binding that could prevent serious fall-related injuries by releasing the boot from the board in multiple positions, was invented by Jason Zuleger. The binding won third place for the Schoofs Prize. (Large image) |
Other winners include:
Schoofs Prize for Creativity
Tong Prototype Prize
The competitions are sponsored by the
UW Technology Enterprise Cooperative.
The
Schoofs Prize for Creativity
is funded by Richard J. Schoofs, who received a bachelor of science degree in chemical engineering in 1953 from UW-Madison.
The
Tong Prototype Prizes
and grants are sponsored by the Tong Family Foundation, including COE alumnus Peter P. Tong, who received his master of science degree in electrical and computer engineering in 1965.
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