24/09/2002
Maghera student scoops national engineering prize
An 18-year-old student from St Patrick’s College, Maghera, has won a major national award for his engineering skills.
Patrick Corbett, the Northern Ireland champion in the annual Young Engineers for Britain competition, was presented with the award for Most Innovative Electrical Engineering project in the UK national finals of the competition, held at London’s New Connaught Rooms.
He was presented with his award, in front of an audience of some 400 people from the worlds of industry and education, by TV celebrities Kate Bellingham, the President of Young Engineers, and 'Tomorrow’s World' presenter Adam Hart-Davis.
The award-winning invention was a self-automated lubrication machine, which Patrick designed to solve a specific problem at a local powder-coating plant. After identifying the root cause of the problem, Patrick worked for six months to come up with a solution that would increase productivity and reduce factory downtime.
The factory felt that two of their most skilled technicians were wasting their time and skills, and the machine that be built was designed specifically to alleviate this problem. Since the machine was introduced to the factory earlier this year, it has already helped the company to achieve a significant increase in productivity and profitability.
Patrick undertook the project as part of his design and technology course at St Patrick’s College. He is about to start a degree course in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering at Queen’s University.
In winning the regional Young Engineers competition and going on to win a major award in the national competition, Patrick is following in the footsteps of fellow St Patrick’s College students Enda Young and Brendan Quinn, who won last year’s Northern Ireland and UK national contests. They went on to represent the country at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in the USA — winning first prize in the engineering section — and the Expo Science Europe Fair in Bratislava, Slovakia.
Young Engineers for Britain is a national engineering competition for young people, which has been run since 1977 and is managed by the Young Engineers national network of clubs in schools.
(GMcG)
Patrick Corbett, the Northern Ireland champion in the annual Young Engineers for Britain competition, was presented with the award for Most Innovative Electrical Engineering project in the UK national finals of the competition, held at London’s New Connaught Rooms.
He was presented with his award, in front of an audience of some 400 people from the worlds of industry and education, by TV celebrities Kate Bellingham, the President of Young Engineers, and 'Tomorrow’s World' presenter Adam Hart-Davis.
The award-winning invention was a self-automated lubrication machine, which Patrick designed to solve a specific problem at a local powder-coating plant. After identifying the root cause of the problem, Patrick worked for six months to come up with a solution that would increase productivity and reduce factory downtime.
The factory felt that two of their most skilled technicians were wasting their time and skills, and the machine that be built was designed specifically to alleviate this problem. Since the machine was introduced to the factory earlier this year, it has already helped the company to achieve a significant increase in productivity and profitability.
Patrick undertook the project as part of his design and technology course at St Patrick’s College. He is about to start a degree course in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering at Queen’s University.
In winning the regional Young Engineers competition and going on to win a major award in the national competition, Patrick is following in the footsteps of fellow St Patrick’s College students Enda Young and Brendan Quinn, who won last year’s Northern Ireland and UK national contests. They went on to represent the country at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in the USA — winning first prize in the engineering section — and the Expo Science Europe Fair in Bratislava, Slovakia.
Young Engineers for Britain is a national engineering competition for young people, which has been run since 1977 and is managed by the Young Engineers national network of clubs in schools.
(GMcG)
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A new Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) campaign aimed at encouraging UK employers to take on young people to train as apprentices highlights the need to act fast to secure the best employees. A mailshot in the form of a dummy chocolate box has been sent out to employers who, when opening it, find that there are none left.
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New Deal scheme shows continuing promise
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New Deal scheme shows continuing promise
The government's flagship New Deal for Young People has proved to be a continuing success after new figures showed that 312,000 young people in the UK had moved from benefits to employment. Approximately 9,700 young people found jobs in June through the New Deal scheme, which has been extended to other groups since its launch in 1998.
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