WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. – During the past decade, Pennsylvania College of Technology’s Baja SAE (Society of Automotive Engineers) team members have journeyed more than 20,000 miles to test their talent. Next year, they will travel less than 10 from main campus to do that.
Penn College will host a Baja SAE competition May 16-19, 2024, at its Schneebeli Earth Science Center near Montgomery and Allenwood. Dubbed "Baja SAE Williamsport," the international event is expected to attract 80-plus teams and about 800 competitors.
“We are excited and proud to host such a premier event, featuring talented teams from an array of colleges and universities throughout the United States and several other countries,” said Michael J. Reed, president of Penn College. “The decision by SAE to stage the competition here is a testament to our dedicated faculty and staff who have embraced the opportunity and our tremendous facilities. Baja SAE is a real-world, hands-on engineering challenge. As a national leader in applied technology education, Penn College is a very appropriate and deserving host.”
The competition requires schools to design, manufacture and build a single-seat, all-terrain vehicle. Following two days of technical inspections and presentations, the teams compete in a series of dynamic events that challenge all aspects of their handiwork.
Typical events include acceleration, sled pull, maneuverability, and suspension and traction. Baja SAE concludes with its toughest test: a four-hour endurance race.
Since 2011, the Penn College team — composed of students from several engineering-related majors — has posted 13 top-10 finishes in the endurance race, including wins in 2022 at Baja SAE Tennessee Tech and Baja SAE Rochester.
“With our team’s success in recent years, hosting Baja SAE seemed like the next natural step,” said Bradley M. Webb, dean of engineering technologies. Webb and John G. Upcraft, instructor of manufacturing and machining and adviser to Penn College’s Baja SAE club, spearheaded the college’s effort to secure the event.
“It’s a huge honor to have the competition on our campus,” Webb continued. “It’s a great way to showcase the college and its commitment to applied technology education. Baja SAE is a perfect reflection of our hands-on approach at Penn College.”
Students from numerous disciplines — along with faculty and staff — will rely on their practical skills to help prepare the grounds at the Earth Science Center for the event. The heavy equipment operations, forestry and landscape/plant production departments will prep areas for the various dynamic events and will tweak existing hiking trails to create a course for the endurance race.
The course will be 1.2 to 1.4 miles in length and three cars wide.
“It will incorporate obstacles, jumps, changing elevations and rough terrain,” Upcraft said. “The endurance race is the ultimate test for every element of the car. The key to winning is to have a fast car that doesn’t break.”