Tag: Team 5040

  • Loveland FIRST Tech Challenge Team advances to World Championship

    Loveland FIRST Tech Challenge Team advances to World Championship

    Team 10464 The Bionic Tigers at the KY State FTC Championship

    The Bionic Tigers will be competing in the World Championship in Houston, TX from April 20-23.  The World Championship features 160 of the top FTC Teams from over 6300 teams around the world, and this is the 3rd year in a row The Bionic Tigers have qualified for Worlds.

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC) Teams 10464, The Bionic Tigers, and 5040, Nuts & Bolts, competed in the Ohio FTC Championship on March 5. The event, which was held remotely, included presentations to a panel of judges where teams had the opportunity to share the design and development of their robot, their outreach efforts to support STEM and robotics in their community, and their involvement with industry professionals. Teams also submitted scores for 6 robot matches, that were completed on their home fields, trying to score the maximum points possible in two and a half minute matches.  

    Based on their judging and robot performance, Team 5040, Nuts & Bolts, won the Motivate Award and 2nd place robot performance. The Motivate Award recognizes a team that makes a collective effort to make their team known throughout their community and school. Team 10464 won 4th place robot performance and the Think Award, which is the 2nd highest award for the event.  The Think Award is given to the team whose Engineering Portfolio best reflects the team’s journey through the design and build process for their robot.   

    Team 10464 The Bionic Tigers also competed on March 12 at the Kentucky FTC State Championship at Murray St. University. This competition was their first in-person competition in 2 years due to Covid restrictions, and the event included teams from Kentucky, Ohio, Alabama, Tennessee, and Arkansas.  

    At the start of the day, the Bionic Tigers and all competing teams presented to panels of judges for evaluation for awards. Teams also submitted a 15-page engineering portfolio summarizing all of their robot design and development, outreach work with other teams and the community, and connections with the professional STEM community. Following judging, they competed in 6 rounds of qualifying matches and were ranked 3rd in a very competitive field. The top 4 ranked teams became the alliance captains for the elimination rounds, and the Bionic Tigers selected two Kentucky teams as alliance partners. They lost a close match in the semi-finals, and the 1st seed alliance went on to win the robot portion of the competition.


    Team 5040 Nuts & Bolts

    To close out the exciting day, in the awards ceremony the Bionic Tigers won the top award of the event, the Inspire Award. This award recognizes the best all-around team that has shown success in designing and building a competitive robot and shares their experiences, enthusiasm, knowledge with other teams, sponsors, their community, and the judges. The Bionic Tigers also won Promote Award for their video answering the prompt “If there was one thing I would tell my younger self about FIRST it would be…”. 

    As the Inspire Award winner, the Bionic Tigers have advanced to the FTC World Championship in Houston, TX from April 20-23.

    Loveland FTC teams are supported by many generous sponsors including Loveland American Legion Post 256, Sugar Creek Foods, Procter & Gamble, Standex Electronics, CBT Company, Kinetic Vision, Harlow Law Office, and Jarvis Global Investments.

    The Bionic Tigers are seeking additional sponsors to help cover the travel costs for the World Championship in Houston. Please contact lovelandroboticsboosters@gmail.com if you are interested in helping sponsor the trip.

    Loveland Robotics Boosters will be hosting Breakfast with the Bots, a pancake Breakfast fundraiser, on Saturday, April 9.  Tickets are available at www.lovelandroboticsboosters.org

  • Loveland Robotics Team 5040 in Detroit for World Championship

    Loveland Robotics Team 5040 in Detroit for World Championship

    More than 70,000 people from around the world – plus 1,300 robots – will travel to Houston and Detroit to celebrate inspiring young innovators, leaders, and changemakers at the 2019 FIRST®Championship presented by Qualcomm® Incorporated. Join us to experience something extraordinary – and we don’t mean the robots.

    Loveland Robotics Team 5040 (“Nuts and Bolts”) left town Tuesday for the  FTC World Championship Competition in Detroit.

    The team will be competing in the Ochoa Division against other teams from across the United States and the world, including Israel, the Netherlands, Germany, Romania, Poland, United Kingdom, South Africa and South Korea.

    This is the third consecutive year that team 5040 has qualified to compete in the World Championships.

    To learn more about Team 5040 watch this LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV interview with Nick Rasmussen.

    Loveland Magazine is a sponsor of Loveland Robotics…

  • Record crowd inspired by world’s largest celebration of young innovators and changemakers including LHS students at FIRST Championship in Detroit as more than 40,000 people attended to Watch Students Compete with Team-Built Robots

    Record crowd inspired by world’s largest celebration of young innovators and changemakers including LHS students at FIRST Championship in Detroit as more than 40,000 people attended to Watch Students Compete with Team-Built Robots

    In the photo above is Loveland High School’s Team 5040

    Back row (L to R) Jacob Chiarenzelli, Jackson Daumeyer, Loveland Superintendent Dr. Amy Crouse, Bryce Reinhold, Nate Matuszak, Chad Royal; Middle row (L to R) Kai Reinhold, Haley Dues, Matt Spitzley, Ben Kavouras; Back row (L to R) Stephanie Spitzley, Garrett Royal, Cooper Baumgarth and Kat Sanderson

    More Than 40,000 people attended to watch, including 15,000 students ages 6-18 Compete with Team-Built Robots

    Over 40,000 people, including 15,000 students ages 6-18, traveled to Detroit, putting their innovation skills to the test at the annual FIRST Championship Presented by Qualcomm® Incorporated, held at the Cobo Center and Ford Field. (Photo: Business Wire)

    Detroit – Last week, more than 15,000 students from around the world traveled to Detroit, putting their innovation skills to the test at the annual FIRST Championship Presented by Qualcomm® Incorporated, held at the Cobo Center and Ford Field, including Team 5040 from Loveland High School.

    In the championship Loveland 5040 went undefeated in qualifying rounds and won the Ochoa division semifinals. The team ended their season as one of the top 12 teams with an impressive record of 82-10.

    The four-day event came down to a heart-pounding conclusion Saturday night in front of thousands of cheering fans at Ford Field when teams competed in match finals for the FIRST® Robotics Competition and FIRST® Tech Challenge world championships. Four teams from Kalamazoo, Michigan; Clarkston, Michigan; Kingston, Ontario, Canada; and State College, Pennsylvania, were the FIRST Robotics Competition Winning Alliance for this year’s game, FIRST POWER UPSM. Teams from Lexington, Massachusetts; Baden, Pennsylvania; and Lexington, Massachusetts, were the FIRST Tech Challenge RELIC RECOVERYSM Winning Alliance.

    Loveland 5040 earned their spot in Detroit by first qualifying through Ohio as the State Champion. The team then competed in the North Super Regional with the best 72 teams from 13 states where Loveland 5040 finished in the finalist alliance advancing them to Detroit.

    “After watching the students in action in Detroit – I think I can officially say Team 5040 has made me a robotics groupie,” said Loveland Superintendent Dr. Amy Crouse, who Tweeted updates as the team progressed. “We are sincerely so very proud of this team, and we know they will return even bigger and better next year as the organization continues to grow.”

    Students ages 6-18 participated in FIRST Championship Detroit. FIRST Championship, the world’s largest celebration of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) for students, kicked off last week with 15,000 students in Houston.

    Among the participants, many earned honors for design excellence, competitive play, research, business plans, website design, and teamwork. A not-for-profit organization founded in 1989 by inventor Dean Kamen, FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) inspires innovation and leadership in young people through engaging, team-based robotics challenges. Kamen invented of the segway.

    In Detroit, 700 robotics teams from 37 countries across the four FIRST programs participated. More than 91,000 students on 3,650 teams from 37 countries competed during the 2018 season.

    FIRST President Donald E. Bossi said: We’re marking the culmination of another fantastic FIRST season, and once again, we’ve had fantastic growth. More than half-a-million young people directly participated in our programs, which engaged 61,000 teams, an impressive 23 percent increase from just last year. We will not stop [growing] until all students have access to the education and experiences that FIRST programs provide.

    “On behalf of my team I want to say a very special thank you to Superintendent Dr. Amy Crouse and LHS Principal Peggy Johnson for traveling to Detroit to watch us compete,” said LHS student and team member Garrett Royal. “They are some of our biggest supporters, and we are grateful to them. We also want to thank former athletic director, Juliann Renner, who supported us like we were one of her athletic teams, and LHS Teacher Phil Marchal and volunteer Mark Chast for starting and coaching this team seven years ago. We are thankful for your vision and leadership that has touched so many students over the years.”

    Her Excellency the Right Honourable Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada, addressed FIRST supporters: What you do right here at FIRST is extraordinarily important. It’s not just about robotics. It’s not just about science. It’s about people. It’s about collaborating. It’s about making it happen. It’s about forming teams, mentoring teams, sharing your experience. Whether you are a volunteer, a donator, a sponsor, a supporter, a participant, a parent, a teacher, you make a difference, and here we just use the incredible world of science and technology to do so and we prepare the future in so many different ways.

    Photo from Robotics 5040

    FIRST® Tech Challenge World Championship

    FIRST Tech Challenge students learn to think like engineers. Teams build robots from a reusable kit of parts, develop strategies, document their progress, and compete head to head. In the 2017-18 game, FIRST RELIC RECOVERY, teams work in an alliance to go on a robot adventure. The goal is to score more points than the opposing alliance during 150 seconds of game play that includes autonomous and driver-controlled periods.

    Their performance at the FIRST World Championship earned Loveland 5040 an exclusive invitation to compete over the summer at the Maryland Technical Invitational (MTI). At MTI teams from all over the world will meet for a weekend of competition and learning. Scientists and engineers from the Space Sector of Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory will speak about two of their cutting-edge missions, New Horizons and Dragonfly.

    Photo from Robotics 5040

    Team 5040, Nuts & Bolts, Loveland, Ohio was a Division Finalists in the Ochoa Division:

    “It has been an amazing year, and we couldn’t have done it without incredible support,” said LHS Teacher and Robotics Coordinator Amy Stewart. “I want to send a huge thank you to Coach Chad Royal, Mentors Peter Kavouras, Eric Spitzley and Chris Reinhold.”

    Want to be a part of Loveland Robotics?

    The Loveland Robotics Teams are very grateful for all businesses that support them and we are looking for additional sponsors.  Sponsorship can take many forms, from expertise in a specific field to materials to financial assistance.

    Our Team Business Plan provides information about all aspects of our FTC teams. Questions about the Business Plan or any of the Teams can be sent to Amy Stewart at stewaram@lovelandschools.org.



  • Loveland Robotics Team 5040 goes to World Championship!

    Loveland Robotics Team 5040 goes to World Championship!

    Team earns second out of 72 teams at Super Regional Competition

    Photo from Robotics 5040 @Robotics5040

    Loveland High School’s (LHS) FIRST Robotics Team 5040, Nuts and Bolts, is going to the FIRST FTC World Championship for the second year in a row. The team earned the ability to compete at the world championship March 15-17 at the FIRST FTC North Super Regionals. Team 5040 finished the tournament as the finalist alliance – second place out of 72 teams.

    “Our students, our staff and our sponsors are all so excited to continue on this thrilling journey,” said LHS Teacher and Robotics Coordinator Amy Stewart. “This is what we have spent the entire year focused on achieving, and we made it! I’m super proud of our students and all they have accomplished.”

    Team travels to Detroit to compete in the World Championship April 24-28.

    Photo from Robotics 5040 @Robotics5040

    Photo from Robotics 5040 @Robotics5040

    Sponsors include: Adobe, American Legion, Blue Chip, Fraternal Order of the Eagles, Honeywell Intelligrated, Johnson Controls, MH Equipment, Jarvis Global Investments, Chipotle, Paula Berryman Photography, Basco and The Hershey Company.



     

  • Loveland High School Robotics Team 5040 scores fourth highest in the world

    Loveland High School Robotics Team 5040 scores fourth highest in the world

    LHS Robotics Team 5040 pictured with their alliance partners at the Cleveland Qualifier Competition January 6.
     

    LHS Robotics Team 5040 UNDEFEATED in Ohio


    Loveland, Ohio
    – The Loveland High School (LHS) Robotics Team 5040 brought home an undefeated title in Ohio at the Cleveland Qualifier competition January 6 in advance of the First Tech Challenge (FTC) Robotics State Tournament in February.

    LHS Robotics Team 5040 is undefeated in Ohio tournaments, and scored the fourth highest score in the world.

    The team won the following awards:

    Winning Alliance Captain

    Promote Award Winner

    Think Award Winner

    Second Place Inspire