Purdue Students Appear on National TV
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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowPurdue University's national champion Rube Goldberg team is in the national spotlight. Team members appeared Wednesday night on ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live. The group has won eight titles in 16 years. During the show, they explained how many steps the machine takes to zip a zipper. May 14, 2014
News Release
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – The Purdue Society of Professional Engineers brings its national champion Rube Goldberg machine to Jimmy Kimmel Live tonight where the student team will demonstrate what happens when you invest 4,000 hours to build a machine to do something even a child can do – zip a zipper.
Inspired by the cartoonist's whimsical paper and ink designs, the Purdue machine goes through 100 clever, sometimes-humorous steps to achieve this year's end task. See it here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XA477DjENZ8&feature=youtu.be
The Purdue students rocked Rube convention when they became the first team in more than three decades of national competition to put a human inside the machine, something Goldberg often did in his cartoons. Look for that nerve-wracking role to be filled by Kimmel tonight.
The national competition was founded at Purdue in 1983 to open up to the world what had been an engineering fraternity grudge match on campus in the 1950s. PSPE holds at least three Guinness World Records for machine complexity and Purdue teams have won 8 of the last 16 national championships.
Each cartoonish machine is a set of smaller machines that must be conceived, designed and prototyped from scratch in a team environment on deadline. Only a flawlessly running machine is likely to gain a championship. As PSPE relearned this year, the machine must be inspirational, accessible and fun to gain the affection of fans and judges.
Team members include president-elect Jordan Vallejo of Los Angeles, president Adam Bahrainwala of Palantine, Illinois, captain David Cannon of Valparaiso, Indiana, Andrew Rawlins of Greenwood, Indiana, Ben Hilker of Edwardsville, Illinois, Rebecca Russell of Elkhorn, Wisconsin.
Source: Purdue University