The project director of the Bloodhound SSC is visiting ECSA on Monday 27 Feb at 17:45.
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AND Try building your own balloon powered rocket car

 

Projects on the go

Of the issues submitted on the Helping My Community page we report back on the projects in progress on this page.  Check back soon to see engineering projects being run by engineering students from the University of Pretoria as part of their Community Based Project Module.
JCP-students danced with wolves

Four students built shading structures for the wolves and husky's at the HuskyRomi rescue and wolf sanctuary in Reitz, Free State. At the sanctuary there is at this stage126 wolves and 21 husky's.

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JCP-students fix and renovate at Tuine Technical High School

At first they only planned to fix all the broken overhead projectors, but got so involved in their projects that they also replaced a ceiling as well as window panes. For them it was a rewarding experiences. Thanks to this team the educators can utilise the overhead projectors again.

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Jukskie field for Brits Rusoord

Three engineering students built a jukskei field for Brits Rusoord. The students managed to get sponsors for the paving as well as the sand.

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whats-new

SAWomEng@network will host its first set of workshops in November. Ideally geared at young graduates in the engineering industry, this year, they aim to tackle Ethical Leadership and the contribution engineers make to ethical leadership and decision making. For further details visit www.sawomeng.org.za

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Mabohlale Mampuru

Mabohlale Mampuru studied civil engineering at UCT and  is currently working as Associate Consultant at Dalberg Global Development Advisors.  Read more about Mabohlale’s world here or visit www.SAWomEng.org.za or www.dalberg.com

 

did-you-know

Today's fastest supercomputers will eventually be left in the (very) slow lane, computer engineers say. Future quantum computers, which work by manipulating atoms and molecules, will be millions of times faster than anything available today.