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engineering (2)

Race Vault - Every season starts ahead

Problem It Solves: 

Student motorsport teams such as SAE Baja, Formula Student, and Go-Kart lose important technical experience annually as senior students graduate. They frequently lose design decisions, test data, contacts with suppliers, and interpretation of the rules. The outcome is that new members waste weeks learning the ropes again, repeat the same mistakes, and end up consuming limited budgets on trial and error.

Key issues include:

  • Scattered Data → CAD files, CFD/FEA results, BOMs, telemetry, and supplier info are stored in disconnected folders, drives, or chats.

  • Loss of Design Rationale → Students see the final geometry but not why it was chosen (trade-offs between weight, manufacturability, downforce, and rules).

  • High Onboarding Time → New engineers struggle to understand naming conventions, material picks, and past test failures.

  • Rules & Compliance Drift → Rulebooks change annually, but no system tracks updates or maps them to subsystems.

  • Supplier Memory Lost → Vendor details and procurement insights vanish, forcing every team to start supplier negotiations from zero.

This leads to wasted time, higher costs, and slower innovation—all while competitions demand more technical rigor each year.

 

Current Market Gap:

Although solutions such as Notion, Google Drive, or Confluence are available, they are generic and do not have motorsport workflows. They do not fit into CAD/CFD/FEA tools, telemetry data, and rulebooks, and they offer no organized way of knowledge transfer. What’s missing is a student-friendly, motorsport-specific knowledge management platform that captures technical decisions, integrates engineering data, and ensures continuity between batches.

 

My Solution: RaceVault

A digital knowledge-transfer and project management platform designed specifically for student motorsport teams.

Core Features:

  • Subsystem Workspaces → Prebuilt templates for Aero, Suspension, Powertrain, Chassis, and Electronics with standardized fields (constraints, load cases, validation tests).

  • Decision Graphs → Every design choice is linked to alternatives considered, simulations, trade-offs, and final reasoning.

  • Data Integration → Connects with CAD/PDM, CFD/FEA logs, DAQ/telemetry, and BOM spreadsheets; auto-tags and links artifacts.

  • Rules Diff Engine → Upload new rulebook; system highlights changes, flags impacted subsystems, and assigns tasks.

  • Test Data Locker → Stores telemetry, skidpad results, cooling tests, and endurance logs—tagged by driver, setup, and track conditions.

  • Supplier & BOM Manager → Central database of vendor contacts, quotes, lead times, QA notes, and part history.

  • Onboarding Tracks → Role-based learning modules (e.g., “Aero Newbie Path”) pulling best examples from past seasons.

  • AI Copilot → Private AI that answers team-specific queries like “Why did we pick 4130 steel for A-arms last year?” or “What failed in endurance at 70 km/h?”

 

Who Benefits:

  • Student Teams → Save time, avoid repeating mistakes, and design faster with historical insights.

  • New Members → Onboard quickly with structured training and access to past rationale.

  • Universities → Stronger performance in competitions, improved safety compliance, and better return on funding.

  • Alumni & Sponsors → Continued visibility and assurance that their past contributions are preserved and built upon.

  • Society → Fosters engineering excellence and innovation by ensuring that student projects evolve year after year instead of restarting from zero

 

Business Model:

RaceVault uses a tiered access scheme that is student-friendly and affordable. At the first tier, Freemium Access will enable all teams to utilize the basic features, including templates, structured storage, and onboarding tracks, entirely without fee implementation. In those teams desiring advanced functionalities, the Pro Subscription offers the team CAD and telemetry integration, the Rules Diff Engine, Supplier Manager, and the AI Copilot, among others, at a modest seasonal price. University Packages, to accommodate multiple-club institutions, provide discounted packages to ensure that a single license is used to benefit SAE, FSAE, and Baja teams. Lastly, alumni or sponsors via the Alumni Sponsorship Mode can sponsor team subscriptions directly and receive reports and a view of how their support is making the next generation of engineers successful.

 

Why This Matters To Me: 

Being a student of Aerospace engineering, an active participant in my university's SAE Baja club, I have come to know during my second year how fragile team knowledge can be. A considerable section of our club constitutes seniors who will graduate this year or next, and with them, much of the useful experience, technical information, and contacts with suppliers will also be lost. The current team is not the only one to suffer this loss, but we who will remain and continue racing in the future will suffer setbacks that will be felt over the long term. With no organized means of preservation of what our seniors know, we tend to make the same mistakes, waste budgets on trial and error, and waste weeks scouring the streets to retrieve some information that was supposed to be at our fingertips.

RaceVault is not merely a tool; it is the insurance of my team in the future. By preserving knowledge and data through every season, it ensures we spend less time retracing old steps and more time innovating, testing, and winning.

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In engineering and design, both AutoCAD and Fusion 360 are very popular tools. AutoCAD is mainly used for making accurate 2D drawings, while Fusion 360 is widely used for 3D modeling, simulation, and even manufacturing. The problem comes when someone wants to take a 2D design made in AutoCAD and turn it into a 3D model in Fusion 360. Right now, this is not simple at all.

Most people either redraw the entire model again in Fusion 360, which takes a lot of time, or they use file formats like DXF or STEP to import the design. But these imports often don’t work well. Common issues include shapes not getting recognized, scaling problems, missing dimensions, and broken sketches. This means users spend extra hours fixing errors or remaking the whole model. For students, engineers, and small companies, this can be very frustrating.

My idea is to build a tool that can directly convert AutoCAD 2D drawings into fully editable Fusion 360 3D models. The tool would not just copy the drawing but would understand the lines, circles, layers, and dimensions in AutoCAD. Then, it would create 3D sketches and bodies inside Fusion 360 automatically. For example, if a closed profile is drawn in AutoCAD, the tool could extrude it into a 3D solid in Fusion. This way, the design is ready to use in just minutes, instead of hours.

The people who will benefit most are engineering students, product designers, architects, and small-scale manufacturers. Students will save valuable time during projects, engineers can speed up their workflow, and manufacturers can move faster from 2D designs to production.

This problem matters to me because I have faced it myself. In my projects, I often had to rebuild the same design twice — once in AutoCAD for 2D and then again in Fusion for 3D. It made me lose interest and slowed down my progress. I realized that many others face the same issue. That is why a direct converter can make a big difference. It will not only save time but also encourage people to be more creative, since they don’t have to worry about repeating the same work again and again.

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