WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. – For a decade, Pennsylvania College of Technology’s Baja SAE team has placed among the nation’s elite in grueling endurance races. After Baja SAE Tennessee Tech, the team reigns supreme.
Penn College topped a 72-car field in Cookeville, Tennessee, on Sunday, May 15, to win the endurance race for the first time, besting the likes of Michigan, Michigan State, Purdue, Cornell, Rochester Institute of Technology, Case Western Reserve, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech, Clemson, Auburn and Texas A&M. The four-hour race, consisting of rugged terrain and tight turns, is Baja SAE’s marquee event.
Conducted by the Society of Automotive Engineers, the competition requires schools to design, manufacture and build a single-seat, all-terrain vehicle to survive various challenges.
“It’s so gratifying to win this race after being close in other years (10 top-10 finishes since 2011),” said John G. Upcraft, instructor of manufacturing and machining and adviser to Penn College’s Baja SAE club since its inception 17 years ago. “It’s an unbelievable feeling. I’m so proud of the team’s effort and the dedication they’ve shown in the months leading up to the competition. They have worked very hard for this moment. The victory is well-deserved.”
“This victory is not just the result of the effort from this year’s team. It’s the culmination of years of effort by past teams who established and built upon a solid foundation,” said Dakota C. Harrison, of Lewisberry, Baja club vice president and one of two Penn College drivers for the endurance race. “The realization of how many teams before us have been aiming for this makes our win somewhat surreal. We’re standing on the shoulders of giants today.”
Penn College began the endurance race in third position, a result of the team’s third-place showing in the acceleration competition, one of four dynamic events held the previous day.
By the end of the first 1.2-mile lap, Harrison navigated Penn College to the lead with École de technologie supérieure (a Montreal university) and Michigan in hot pursuit. The second half of the race was mostly a two-car duel between Michigan and Penn College.
“We were putting a lot of pressure on each other. It was a matter of who could hold up to that pressure the longest,” Harrison said.
The pressure intensified for the Penn College team when a problem with the car’s side panel forced an unplanned pit stop about three hours into the race. The panel’s corner became detached from the car’s frame. Instead of panicking, the Penn College crew, led by Dhruv Singh, of Dayton, New Jersey, improvised. They employed zip ties and gaffer tape to secure the corner in under five minutes.