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CPUT to host UNESCO Engineering Week

Wednesday, 25 October 2017

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CPUT to host UNESCO Engineering Week

Next year CPUT will host the 5th Annual Africa Engineering Week – an initiative jointly organised by UNESCO, the Department of Science and Technology and Engineering Council of South Africa.

Prof Marshall Sheldon, Acting DVC: Research and Innovation, led the CPUT delegation that attended this year’s Africa Engineering Week, which took place earlier in the month at the Central University of Technology in Bloemfontein. She participated in a panel focussing on the role of Engineering in addressing the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals 2030.

CPUT’s Faculty of Engineering also took part in the Engineering Exhibition held in conjunction with this event. Its stall was a joint effort between the faculty’s Student Engagement Coordinator, Luvuyo Kakaza, Rizah Rowe and Sinamandla Maqina from FSATI (French South Africa Institute of Technology), as well as Muziwandile Mazibuko from the Mechatronics Department. During this two-day exhibition, a number of Science and Mathematics learners from schools in Bloemfontein and surrounds attended.

The UNESCO Africa Engineering Week is annual event, hosted by the Department of Science and Technology and supported by the Engineering Council of South Africa, that is focused on addressing the challenges represented by a shortage of engineers in South Africa and attracting learners to subjects like Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics. This is a multifaceted event that rotates among the nine provinces of South Africa.

“It is with the expectation of great things happening on campus that we anticipate hosting next year’s Africa Engineering Week. This year’s installment of the initiative was very enlightening and stimulating for all who attended.

“I invite each member of the CPUT community to join the Faculty of Engineering in surpassing the success achieved at this year’s event,” says Sheldon.

Written by CPUT News
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Fine-tuning studying to work for you

Tuesday, 11 December 2018

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Fine-tuning studying to work for you

Growing up in Lady Frere in the Eastern Cape Sinamandla Maqina was that child who would take apart the radio. He wanted to know where the voices were coming from, but would always end up with pieces of unidentifiable equipment strewn on the floor.

“Unfortunately, I cost my parents a few of those,” he remembers with a wry grin.

Today Sinamandla graduates with a Master’s in Electrical Engineering and the confidence to build a radio from scratch.

The 28-year-old has already done more than reconstitute a radio, his Master’s thesis was “X-band Antenna Design for Nano-Satellite Applications”. This means, supervised by Prof Robert Lehmensiek, he designed an x-band antenna, modelled and simulated it on a computer and then built a working prototype. This antenna has since been built and installed on CPUT’s second nano-satellite which will be launched into space on Christmas Day.

While the nano-satellite uses the S-band for communication, the X-band antenna will be used when it has to send large amounts of data down to earth.

Sinamandla picked this particular thesis topic because of his interest in communication, but he didn’t start out in this exact field. When he registered at CPUT he had to enter the Mechanical Engineering department as his first choice was full. Once he graduated with his Diploma he switched to Electrical Engineering like his older sister.

He describes his first few months at CPUT as difficult, confusing even, because everything was studied through English only. “The problem was in class it would be difficult to understand, but as you go through the work you would see there are things you understand, but they are just moving really fast. Group study helped a lot.”

It also helped to realise that he wasn’t the only student who was struggling: “It’s not anything new, this idea of learning, it is just how it is being done and the speed at which it comes at you, that is different.”

Sinamanda figures next up he had better get a job in the real world of space aeronautics communication, but he doesn’t discount starting on a DEng in the near future. It’s just a case of fine-tuning what he wants, something he learned over the years at CPUT.

Written by Theresa Smith
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