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STEM

Orange Robotics Looking for New Team Members after Top Ten Finish

Wednesday, September 13, 2017, By Alex Dunbar
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College of Engineering and Computer ScienceStudents

It is easy to underestimate a robot that only stands a foot and half tall, but the latest design by Orange Robotics is full of surprises. It can climb stairs, throw a tennis ball, hit a golf ball, sprint and lift weights.

Orange Robotics team

The Orange Robotics team–from left, David Parran, Sounak Das and Sam Meyers–with the robot that won them eighth place in the ASME Student Design Competition.

Graduate student Sounak Das, Sam Meyers ’18 and David Parran ’18 took the robot they built to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Student Design Competition at Tennessee Tech University in April to take on other robots from colleges across the country. Orange Robotics finished eighth out of 48 teams in its first competition and its members are starting to think about their next model.

“A whole new robot, a whole new challenge,” says Meyers.

“Every competition has a problem statement, you design for it,” says Das.

Competitions like the ASME Student Design event require robots be able to able to accomplish multiple tasks and also fit inside a 50-centimeter cube.

“You do run into problems and you find solutions,” says Parran.

Orange Robotics is looking for new members interested in joining the team. They welcome students from any discipline at ϲ.

“We learn to work from a budget, and plan like any business would,” says Das.

“It’s a great hands-on experience tool, applicable in the classroom,” says Parran.

Das, Meyers and Parran say the robotics competitions encourage creative designs and solutions.

“The limit of what you are doing is your imagination,” says Das.

To learn more about Orange Robotics, visit the  or email Meyers at sdmeyers@syr.edu.

  • Author

Alex Dunbar

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