NEW RIDE: MSU Students To Transform Cadillac LYRIQ as Part of EcoCAR Competition Mississippi State University’s (MSU) EcoCAR Electric Vehicle Challenge team officially unveiled its Cadillac LYRIQ this past November at the university’s Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems. The EcoCAR team spent over a year developing designs to implement an all-electric powertrain as well as connected and autonomous features into the vehicle. The interdisciplinary team of students will now implement these designs and compete against some of the top universities in the country beginning in May and through the remainder of the four-year competition. The teardown of the Cadillac LYRIQ to remove the stock components that will be replaced recently began to prepare the vehicle for the integration of the team-added components, like the AWD electric powertrain and the new controllers. “Our mission is to give students hands-on experience applying what they learn in the classroom in the real world through these industry-standard practices, processes and tools,” said Timothy Wunrow, MSU EcoCAR project manager and a master’s student in the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering. “Over the last 19 years, the MSU EcoCAR team has helped many students graduate with high-paying jobs in their chosen industry because the skills we learn here, such as how to communicate and how to solve problems, are transferable across the automotive industry and every other industry.” MSU has a long history of success in EcoCAR competitions, part of the Advanced Vehicle Technology Competitions sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, General Motors and MathWorks. MSU teams have won the national competition four times and regularly receive high marks in the different categories they are judged on, ranging from technical to communications and marketing. “We’ve been part of EcoCAR since its inception, which makes us part of an elite group of universities in the nation that have the privilege and honor for our students to develop the vehicles of the future,” said MSU President Mark E. Keenum. “That is what we are doing here today and that is what our students will be a part of over the next couple years of this competition. This is a unique experience that positions our students to go out into the world and be leaders in this field.” Over the past years, the MSU EcoCAR team converted a stock Chevy Blazer into an onboard hybrid vehicle adding adaptive cruise control and increasing fuel efficiency MSU President Mark E. Keenum and Provost David Shaw, center right, along with Vice President for Research and Economic Development Julie Jordan, left of car, are pictured with MSU student EcoCAR Electric Vehicle Challenge team members, along with faculty advisors and Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems leaders who will help guide the team during the prominent four-year competition to implement an all-electric powertrain and other cutting-edge features in a new Cadillac LYRIQ. The program develops students to become leaders in the automotive and related engineering fields Photo Credit: Grace Cockrell, Mississippi State University 12
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