MORGANTOWN — The latest gift from longtime WVU supporters Dan and Betsy Brown will help fund activities related to the WVU Formula SAE racing team in the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources.
The significant donation will be used by the WVU Formula SAE team in preparation for 2019 competition.
The team is partnered with Rooster Hall Racing (RHR) of Louisa, Va., owned by the Brown’s son and daughter-in-law, Todd and Michelle Brown. RHR is providing two internships to WVU students this year as it competes in the Pirelli World Challenge Series.
The RHR team and driver Johan Schwartz, who recently set the Guinness World Record for the longest continuous car drift in a BMW, rely on student interns to acquire performance data during each race from their WVU-branded BMW M235i touring car. Between races, the students will analyze and compare the collected data with driver feedback to make adjustments to increase the vehicle’s performance throughout the season.
“We are thankful for the support of Dan and Betsy Brown and excited about our partnership with Rooster Hall Racing,” said Justin Kachel, Mountaineer Racing Formula SAE project manager. “The internship for students Mark Ziegler and Justin Moser and the technical expertise that team owners Todd and Michelle Brown, driver Johan Schwartz, team manager Kevin Tuuri and crew chief Eric Meyer will share with the WVU students during the coming year is a tremendous learning opportunity for our team. We look forward to meeting Dan and Betsy Brown and keeping them posted about our team’s activities and progress throughout the year.”
The student interns are team members of WVU Formula SAE, a student race car design competition that encompasses all aspects of the automotive industry including research, design, manufacturing, testing, developing, marketing, management and finance.
Throughout the internship, students will work to promote the WVU Formula SAE team on a national level in hopes of increasing sponsorship and fundraising opportunities for the team. RHR will provide the students with WVU-branded display tents during each race so that they can conduct interviews and publicity events to highlight their experience.
Upcoming races for the Pirelli World Challenge include: May 25-26, and May 28 (Lakeville, Conn.), July 13-15 (Portland, Ore.), Aug. 10-12 (Grantsville, Utah), Aug. 31-Sept. 2 (Watkins Glen, N.Y.).
All 2018 TCR events will be live streamed on the Pirelli World Challenge website as well as in post-produced highlight telecasts on the CBS Sports Network.
Scott Wayne, WVU associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and WVU Formula SAE advisor, said the students also plan to devote some of the donated funds toward building an engine dynamometer testing facility that will allow the team to test and tune their race engines. Funds will also allow students to attend the Optimum G Advanced Vehicle Dynamics and Data Driven Performance Engineering seminars where they will learn how to design and analyze their race car’s suspension.
“The team also hopes to compete in all three North American Formula SAE events in 2019, which would not be possible without support from generous sponsors like the Brown family,” Wayne said.
Dan Brown graduated from WVU in 1959 with a degree in business administration. He is retired from The Capital Group Companies, Inc. Betsy Brown also is a 1959 graduate of the university, earning her degree in agriculture and forestry. The Browns have been longtime philanthropic supporters of WVU, providing gifts over the years to numerous areas of the university. In 2009, the Browns were recognized as Outstanding Philanthropists by the WVU Foundation.
Todd and Michelle Brown have owned Rooster Hall Racing since 2014. Their daughter, Erin, played soccer at WVU and graduated in 2016.
The gift from the Browns was made through the WVU Foundation, the non-profit corporation that generates, receives and administers private gifts for the benefit of WVU.