News


Stellenbosch wins PneuDrive Challenge 2015

November 2015 News

The very successful PneuDrive Challenge, a mechatronics design competition for engineering students throughout South Africa, has come to a close for 2015 with Stellenbosch once again walking away with top honours. The theme of this year’s competition was to design a game changer for the food and beverage industry.

This year’s competitors had the opportunity to start stepping across the bridge that exists between academic theory and business reality. The winners of the competition receive a 10 day all expenses paid trip to Europe where they will have an opportunity to present their designs to the head offices of the sponsor companies – another invaluable learning opportunity for young engineers. SEW-Eurodrive and SMC Pneumatics also offer equipment to competing universities to ensure that future students are afforded the opportunity to experiment with the latest in drive engineering and pneumatic technology.

The judging panel consisted of a range of industry experts, from l: John Menasce, consulting engineering and project implementation, Hatch; Brian Abbott, product manager, SMC Pneumatics; Johan van Graan, trainer, SEW-Eurodrive; Riaan van Eck, training manager, SMC Pneumatics; Dr Mark Gordon, Eskom; Eugene Tondolo, president, South African Fluid Power Association; Conrad Pilger, general manager: sales & engineering, SEW –Eurodrive; Tobias Nittel, food and beverage conveying expert, SEW-Eurodrive (Germany); Greg Perry, general manager operations, SEW-Eurodrive.
The judging panel consisted of a range of industry experts, from l: John Menasce, consulting engineering and project implementation, Hatch; Brian Abbott, product manager, SMC Pneumatics; Johan van Graan, trainer, SEW-Eurodrive; Riaan van Eck, training manager, SMC Pneumatics; Dr Mark Gordon, Eskom; Eugene Tondolo, president, South African Fluid Power Association; Conrad Pilger, general manager: sales & engineering, SEW –Eurodrive; Tobias Nittel, food and beverage conveying expert, SEW-Eurodrive (Germany); Greg Perry, general manager operations, SEW-Eurodrive.

The judging panel, consisting of industry and product experts, worked through the entries during a two day judging process which took place at the SEW-Eurodrive offices in Johannesburg. The judging panel announced the top three teams for the 2015 Competition as:

1. Stellenbosch University: BottleBot.

2. Wits: The Potato Game Changer

3. Wits: Autonomous Warehouse Floor Cleaner (this team also received the Innovation Prize).

Stellenbosch University takes first place

The Mechabrewers team came out tops with its design. The Stellenbosch University team visited local micro beer brewery, Stellenbrau and analysed a specific problem – the need for an efficient, inexpensive and automated application for transporting empty beer bottles onto the capping machine.

Micro-breweries do not always have the capital to invest in expensive equipment. Thus they often rely on rudimentary means of solving problems, such as the transporting of bottles in a factory. Stellenbrau relies on manual labour for most of its operations. The team consisted of Reghardt Pretorius, Johannes Leuvennink, Madeli du Toit, Josua Blom and Jean Swart under the guidance of lecturer, Dr Cobus Muller.

The solution proposed by the team aims to improve and add value to the company by allowing better utilisation of labour, and improvements in time and efficiency, by automating the process of transporting empty beer bottles onto a capping machine.

BottleBot has a low energy consumption of 24,474 kWh per year and has been designed to be controlled by a smartphone or tablet device. The BottleBot can increase efficiency and accuracy through complete automation and elimination of human error and contamination. One cycle consists of picking up 12 bottles on one side of the production line and placing it onto the capping machine on the opposite side. The duration of one cycle is a minimum of 8 seconds. The BottleBot’s retail price will be significantly lower than the price of similar products available on the market. The capital expenses of the BottleBot will be justified after two and a half years.

<b?Wits University: The Potato Game Changer</b>

This team had a very technical entry of a high standard which addresses the problem of transforming waste into useable energy in a potato chip factory.

Potato chip making factories produce significant quantities of starch laden waste water and solid vegetable wastes such as potato peels. The starch waste water can be very harmful to the environment and potato peel waste is of zero value to factories.

At a local chip factory in Gauteng, this waste is presently under-utilised. This project proposes that a system using anaerobic digestion (AD) be employed to dispose of the solid waste and clean the waste water while producing a useful by-product in the form of biogas. This biogas can be used to supplement any existing system in the heating of the chip cookers, thereby reducing energy costs.

This design report suggests that there is a possible solution for the effective use of these waste products – to produce something that is of value to the factory in a low cost process, namely anaerobic digestion (AD). In the processing industry, especially in South Africa, AD technology is not readily available in the required configuration, so a gap in the market certainly exists for this system.

This highly technical and interesting study was presented by competing students Micha Dedekind, Craig Daniel and Richard Grieves under guidance from lecturer, Prof Joao Nobre.

Wits University: Automated Warehouse Cleaner

This team identified a health and safety risk caused by broken bottles and spillage on the Rosslyn brewery factory floor. During the conveyor packing process, filled bottles of beer are often broken due to the high pressure applied during the filling process. These broken bottles fall off the conveyor lines and pose a substantial safety hazard for employees. Added to this problem is the fact that conveyors in the factory use soap and water lubricant which increases the danger of a slippery floor.

The team observed that an external contractor cleans the floor three times a day to reduce the health and safety risk. However, when cleaners are not present, the floor remains filled with glass shards and water. They proposed an autonomous cleaning machine as their solution to this obviously unacceptable problem.

Competing students Vuledzani Madala, Portia Sibambo, Nkosinathi Shongwe and Tisetso Ramolobe under guidance of lecturer, Prof Joao Nobre won third prize as well as the Innovation Prize for this entry.

Formal prize giving for this competition takes place in January 2016. The new theme for 2016 will be announced by the end of November 2015.

For more information contact Lindy Ndaba, SEW-Eurodrive, +27 (0)11 248 7000, lndaba@sew.co.za, www.sew.co.za



Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Schneider Electric announces 2023 Global Alliance Partner Programme award winners
Schneider Electric South Africa News
Schneider Electric has announced the winners of the 2023 Global Alliance Excellence Awards. Throughout 2023, Schneider Electric’s Alliance Partners supported customers in the digitalisation of industrial automation, delivering value with innovative initiatives, solutions and services.

Read more...
Custom containerised lubrication dispensing system
News
Bosch Rexroth Africa recently supplied and installed a customised environmentally friendly and dust-proof lubrication dispensing system for a leading earth-moving equipment supplier.

Read more...
Siemens to acquire industrial drive technology business of ebm-papst
Siemens South Africa News
Siemens has signed an agreement to acquire the industrial drive technology business of ebm-papst. The business includes intelligent, integrated mechatronic systems in the protective extra-low voltage range and innovative motion control systems.

Read more...
Bearings International fosters a segment strategy
Bearings International News
Bearings International has a segment approach to the market, which places an intentional focus on key industries in South and sub-Saharan Africa in a bid to optimise operations, enhance uptime, and drive business sustainability and increased profitability outcomes for customers.

Read more...
Local robotics team’s journey to the world stage
News
In the heart of Cape Town, a group of young visionaries aged 12 to 17 is making waves in the world of robotics. Known as Texpand, this team from Pinelands has not only dominated the First Tech Challenge (FTC) in South Africa, but has also earned international acclaim for its innovative approach to engineering and problem solving.

Read more...
RS Group expands by 10 000 products
RS South Africa News
RS South Africa has announced its Better World Claims Based Framework, enabling customers to select verified sustainable product alternatives. This provides suppliers with a standardised framework to accelerate the development and manufacture of more sustainable and responsible products.

Read more...
IRP 2023 could reset SA’s social and economic problems
News
ACTOM recently held a webinar on the ‘Draft IRP2023 Impact on the Manufacturing Sector’. South Africa’s Draft Integrated Resource Plan 2023 is a key document that outlines a comprehensive strategy for addressing the country’s energy security challenges, while also setting out its transition to a diversified energy mix, including renewables.

Read more...
Young scientists to showcase innovative research
News
Innovative South African research which includes a cost-effective triage test for real-time detection of TB and a nature-based technology that brings about environmental remediation, will be showcased at this year’s International Festival of Engineering, Science and Technology in Tunisia.

Read more...
Moog takes a leadership position in lunar exploration
News
NASA is planning for a sustained human presence on the Moon, and resources such as water could eventually be harnessed from the lunar surface instead of being transported from Earth, and it has turned to industry to find ways to excavate and transport that icy regolith.

Read more...
From the editor's desk: The weakest link
Technews Publishing (SA Instrumentation & Control) News
Lately I’ve been getting an ever-increasing number of articles on cybersecurity in my inbox. It’s easy to put it on the backburner, but there is no doubt that this is a very serious problem that’s not ...

Read more...