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  <content>&lt;p&gt;
Thanks to donations from Madison-based foundations and industry, a team of University of Wisconsin-Madison mechanical engineers will have the chance to develop an earth-friendly snowmobile that could facilitate scientific research in Antarctica and Greenland.
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Christened the Silent BuckEV, the electric sled will compete in the 2008 Society of Automotive Engineering Zero-Emissions Electric Snowmobile Event, to be held on the Michigan Technological University campus in March.
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UW-Madison team faculty adviser Glenn Bower, a faculty associate in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, says the team appreciates the support from donors. This month, the Brittingham Foundation donated $13,000 and Polaris Industries supplied a snowmobile chassis, valued at $4,000. In May, the Evjue Foundation, the charitable arm of Madison newspaper The Capital Times, donated $13,000.
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&amp;quot;The support has really made it possible to do the project,&amp;quot; Bower says. &amp;quot;We couldn't have undertaken the task without outside funds.&amp;quot;
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Though this is the UW-Madison team's first year in the zero-emissions event, the team is familiar with snowmobiles. With its hybrid-electric snowmobile, UW-Madison has participated in the SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge since 2002 and claimed first place in 2004 and 2006.
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The zero-emissions event is different because the snowmobiles are completely electric. SAE partnered with the National Science Foundation for the event on behalf of a request by VECO Polar Resources, NSF support contractor in Greenland.
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The goal for zero-emissions teams is to help scientific research in Greenland and Antarctica. Air and snow samples can be contaminated by gas-powered vehicles used to get scientists to the coring spots. &amp;quot;Dog sleds are their only other option at this point,&amp;quot; Bower says.
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In the past, NSF has sponsored zero-emissions teams to travel to Summit Station, Greenland, says Bower.
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The zero-emissions competitions began in 2004, but so far the entries haven't been electrically safe or reliable overall, according to Bower. UW-Madison has worked on hybrid vehicles since 1993 through U.S. Department of Energy student challenges; as a result, says Bower, the students are familiar with the high-voltage motors and batteries used in the snowmobile events.
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&amp;quot;We're just applying knowledge we already have to a snowmobile chassis, and then we make it very reliable,&amp;quot; Bower says.
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He and team co-adviser, Ethan Brodsky, an assistant scientist in the departments of radiology and medical physics, contribute more than 20 years of leadership and experience in hybrid vehicles to the UW-Madison team.
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Students also bring experience to the team and have their own goals for the zero-emissions project. Adam Schumacher, a senior mechanical engineering student, has been involved with the clean snowmobile team for four years and currently is modeling where the electric motor will be positioned in the chassis.
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&amp;quot;I've been a snowmobile enthusiast since I was a kid,&amp;quot; Schumacher says. &amp;quot;Snowmobiling is currently facing restrictions because of noise pollution and greenhouse gases, and by being on this team, I can work to keep that from happening.&amp;quot;
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Michael Maney, also a senior mechanical engineering student, says the snowmobile team is great hands-on experience for a lot of students. A former snowmobile racer, Maney says the best part is learning the entire design process. &amp;quot;Modeling, fabricating, putting it together and seeing how it does in the real world-you do it all,&amp;quot; he says.
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The competition has several categories, including weight, acceleration and sound tests. Additional categories include a distance race, maneuverability course, technical paper and cost analysis. Also, industry experts drive and evaluate the snowmobiles.
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&amp;quot;Hopefully NSF will look at our snowmobile and say, 'That's a great job,'&amp;quot; Bower says.
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</content>
  <description>Thanks to donations from Madison-based foundations and industry, a team of University of Wisconsin-Madison mechanical engineers will have the chance to develop an earth-friendly snowmobile that could facilitate scientific research in Antarctica and Greenland. </description>
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  <headline>For students, electric &#8216;sled&#8217; is good, clean fun in the snow</headline>
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  <pubDate type="datetime">2007-10-31T00:00:00-05:00</pubDate>
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