Cadets win Boeing design challenge

  • Published
  • By Leslie Finstein
  • U.S. Air Force Academy Public Affairs
A year of hard work paid off for team of cadets recently, when they won the Boeing CrewSystem 2035 challenge.

CrewSystem 2035 was a year-long design competition sponsored by Boeing. Teams from the U.S. Naval Academy, the U.S. Military Academy, and the U.S. Air Force Academy were tasked to design the cockpit of a future seventh-generation fighter aircraft. Each team was provided a set of 13 requirements and $75,000 to guide their efforts. Over the course of a year, students progressed through the conceptual and detailed design phases, culminating in the creation and testing of a full-scale mockup.

"Working on it was both a blessing and a curse," said Cadet 1st Class Caroline Kurtz. "It was very interesting to explore all this technology that you've never even thought of or never even seen and then work to figure out how to create the best performance possible."

"The Boeing requirements were very open and let us figure out what we wanted to do in the process, said Cadet 1st Class Ryan Zielinsk. "It was a challenge to define them for ourselves."

According to cadets, the majority of their time was spent in the design phase, and the model itself was constructed over the last couple of months.

"This started for me when I was looking for a summer research project as a junior," Cadet Zielinski said. "That summer we (the cadet team) traveled all over to see what the Air Force is working on in this field. "

Cadets Zielinski and Kurtz agreed that the construction phase was the most fun and pushed the team to get creative.

"We had to innovate, use coat hangers, rubber bands, hot glue, clay, monitors, and spandex fabric to try to bring our point across because there was no other way to show what we were trying to show," said Cadet Kurtz.

"It was cool to see how we could represent our ideas with the materials available to us," said Cadet Zielinski.

The Academy ran this competition as a capstone project through the department of Systems Engineering and had a dedicated team of 15 seniors from 6 different majors, with Lt. Col. Carlene Perry, an assistant professor in the Department of Behavioral Science and Leadership, as course director.

"We chose cadets through a careful selection process and thought about what the project would entail and what kind of academic majors would be useful to have on the team," Colonel Perry said. "Then we approached those departments and sold them on the project and asked them to submit their best cadets for the team, and we chose our team from those groups."

After presenting their final design and demonstration to a panel of seven judges from Boeing on May 3, it was announced that the AFA won the competition. The CEO and President of Boeing Defense, Space and Security, Dennis Muilenburg, along with other Boeing executives, visited the academy May 6 to present a trophy to the team.

"The cadets did a lot of hard work over the past year, and today was the icing on the cake," Colonel Perry said.

Next year's competition awaits, and the team and the advisor, Maj. Arthur Cartwright, an instructor in the Department of Systems Engineering and deputy for this year's winning project, are already assembled and awaiting instructions from Boeing.