Narayan Kar and Matteo Pizzuto check the connectionsCHARGE lab director Narayan Kar and grad student Matteo Pizzuto check the connections between a vehicle in Windsor and operators at a conference in Germany.

Exhibit to connect Windsor Engineering with international industry

The University of Windsor is giving attendees at a conference in Germany a chance to try a remote-control car with a difference: it’s a full-size vehicle more than 6,500 km remote.

A team from Windsor Engineering has set up a connection between the Centre for Engineering Innovation and the Hannover Messe Expo, the world’s trade fair catering to companies from the mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, and digital industries.

Conferees, estimated at 130,000 passing through April 22 to 26, can sit in a simulated automotive cockpit and — in real time — operate a Ford Mustang Mach-E, mounted on a dynamometer in the Centre for Hybrid Automotive Research and Green Energy (CHARGE) lab.

As they accelerate from 0 to 60 km/h, they will see a digital display of the vehicle’s acceleration and power outputs as if they were seated in the car, as well as data from the dynamometer of the torque on the front and rear axles. A video camera installed by the media production team in the Office of Public Affairs and Communications will provide a livestream of the vehicle’s exterior to the cross-Atlantic operators.

The concept was suggested by dean Bill Van Heyst.

“We were invited to participate in a delegation focused on electrical vehicle technologies by NGen Canada, the Global Innovation Cluster for Advanced Manufacturing,” he says. “We knew that we wanted the university to make an impact and nothing attracts more attention at a show like this than a hands-on experience.”

The University intends the demonstration to serve as a conversation starter, says Tom Schnekenburger, director of research partnerships.

“Showing off our remote capabilities is a way to say we have world-class research here and you can work with us from anywhere,” he says. “It will raise awareness in an audience of executives from some of the world’s biggest firms and hopefully generate some new partnerships.

“We can help companies get a little more creative with our infrastructure and expertise they don’t have in-house.”

Teams of students will ensure the smooth operation of the demonstration both in Hanover and in Windsor, where the time difference will mean staffing the lab each day starting at 2 a.m.

MASc student Matteo Pizzuto will troubleshoot any issues in the CHARGE lab.

He says the dynamometer is “like a treadmill for a car.” Custom-built for the lab and funded by NSERC, it allows operators to put vehicles through tests simulating a range of road conditions at speed while remaining stationary.

“It lets us take measurements of data from force exerted to powertrain efficiency, all without leaving the lab,” Pizzuto says.

It is part of the test infrastructure housed in the Centre for Engineering Innovation capable of driving battery-to-powertrain-to-wheel research promoting creativity, collaboration, and practical know-how to lead industry.

Narayan Kar, professor of electrical and computer engineering and director of the CHARGE Lab, says the demo does more than showcase Windsor Engineering’s capabilities in EV research.

“It also facilitates a path for cost-effective and efficient remote research and development,” Dr. Kar says. “With industry R&D professionals able to utilize such test methodology from their own research workspace to control our chassis dyno in Windsor, they’re generating authentic EV benchmarking data within our custom designed environment.”

Taylor LastThe documentary “Be Taylor” reflects the work of a number of UWindsor grads and students.

Debut documentary now streaming

Emerging filmmaker, UWindsor alumna, and Windsor native Gemma Eva (BA 2019, MFA 2021) presents her documentary directorial debut, Be Taylor, streaming free on CBC Gem as part of season 24 of the Absolutely Canadian series.

The documentary follows a young comedian, Taylor Last, for one year as she emerges into Windsor’s comedy scene. It tells of her struggle as a young queer woman who aims to overcome her mental health struggles and regain her confidence by embarking on a journey of self-love, self-discovery, and stand-up comedy.

“I really want to focus on women and queer people because I feel in the comedy community that I’ve seen, there’s a lack of representation there,” Last says. “I’m newer to my journey as a queer person. I’ve been focusing my sets on kind of embracing that and making it a healing process for me for coming to terms with my true authentic self.”

Eva says she was inspired by Last’s efforts to break into a new community in a very public way.

“As an emerging filmmaker, I felt a parallel in our creative journeys as she was also a young woman trying to enter a predominantly male-dominated field,” Eva says. “I became interested in Taylor’s story, learning that stand-up comedy was not only a fun way to entertain her community, but it is also a tool that helped her make light out of dark times.”

Besides Eva, who directed, produced, and co-edited, a number of UWindsor students and alumni worked on this project. Among them were:

  • director of photography and co-editor Calum Hotchkiss (BA 29018, MFA 2021)
  • MFA student Raquel Graston as camera operator and assistant editor
  • camera operators Armend Bajrami (BA 2018), Luca Cunial (BA 2019, MFA 2022), and Benjamin Cheer (BA 2022)
  • development editor Alysha Baker-Dias (BA 2017, MFA 2020)
  • sound recordists Sikandar Saleem (BA 2020) and Steven Boere (BA 2023, B.Ed 2023)
  • production accountant Noah Rocha, a business student

“GeminiFilms Inc. is a small production company that I started after graduating,” says Eva. “I primarily spearhead projects with my fiancée Calum Hotchkiss and my twin brother, Luca Cunial.”

Through GeminiFilms, she has the opportunity to work with local emerging talent and UWindsor alumni. She is keen to show Canadians that Windsor has a film community worth talking about.

“While working full-time in Toronto, Calum, Luca, and I always return to Windsor to produce our film projects — there’s no place like home!”

Be Taylor will debut on CBC TV this summer, and its film festival run is projected to begin later this year.

Special Constable Service vehiclesProjects promoting safety on campus may qualify for grant funding.

Grants available to fund campus safety projects

The Campus Safety Grant Committee is accepting funding applications for creative, innovative proposals for projects to promote safety focusing on sexual violence prevention on campus.

Proposals are welcome from members of the university community, including faculty, staff, and student organizations.

The deadline date for the next round of submissions through the Campus Safety Grant is May 31.

In accordance with the parameters set by the Ministry of Colleges and Universities, submissions are required to support one of the following broad categories or objectives:

  • Awareness or education (e.g., workshops, websites, awareness campaigns)
  • Student services and supports (e.g., campus walk safe programs, sexual assault prevention initiatives, volunteer training, resource materials)
  • Facilities and equipment (e.g., lighting, mirrors, security cameras, emergency phones)

Funding requests are accepted on an ongoing basis by the Office of Human Rights, Equity and Accessibility at:

Projects funded for the upcoming April 1 fiscal must be completed — and invoices paid — by March 1, 2025.