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SUNY Poly Students Crowned Grand Champions at 2025 NFPA Fluid Power Vehicle Challenge

UTICA, NY – A team of engineering students from SUNY Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Poly) have earned national recognition by winning the coveted Grand Champion title at the 2025 National  Fluid Power Association (NFPA) Fluid Power Vehicle Challenge. The competition, held April 9–11 at  IMI plc in Rockford, Illinois, brought together top undergraduate teams from across the country to  showcase innovative applications of hydraulic technology in vehicle design. 

Marking only their second time participating in the event, SUNY Poly’s team returned with a  mission, improve on their impressive third-place finish from 2024. Their efforts culminated in a  commanding performance that earned them top honors in several key categories, including Best  Final Presentation, first place in both the Efficiency and Endurance Races, and second place in the  Sprint Race. Their exceptional results propelled them to the overall Grand Champion distinction. 

The NFPA Fluid Power Vehicle Challenge encourages student teams to reimagine traditional vehicle  platforms using hydraulic power transmission. SUNY Poly’s winning entry, a fluid-powered bicycle,  eliminated the conventional mechanical chain, replacing it with a sophisticated hydraulic system  that directly translated pedal power into motion. Months of design, fabrication, and testing went  into creating the high-performance vehicle, which not only demonstrated engineering excellence  but also highlighted the real-world potential of fluid power systems. 

The SUNY Poly students behind the success — Pascal Harrison, Joshua Archanian, Henry Miller,  Christopher Lam, Kyle Vedder, Edric Pham, and Robert Dawson — are members of the Wildcat Fluid  Power Club. Under the guidance of their faculty advisor, Dr. Ahmed Abdelaal, the team dedicated  hundreds of hours to the project. Their efforts exemplified the collaborative, hands-on learning  environment SUNY Poly fosters through experiential education and industry-connected  opportunities. 

“I’m incredibly proud of our students, not only for their innovation in designing a high-performance  fluid-powered bike, but also for their relentless determination,” said Dr. Abdelaal. “They came back  stronger this year after finishing third last year, and their hard work and resilience truly paid off.  This achievement is a testament to what SUNY Poly students are capable of when given the  opportunity to take on real-world engineering challenges.”

The 2025 competition was held across three host sites: IMI plc in Rockford, Illinois; Danfoss Power  Solutions in Ames, Iowa; and IFP Motion Solutions Inc. in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Each location crowns its own Grand Champion team, with SUNY Poly earning the top distinction at the competition in  Illinois. SUNY Poly’s strong showing on this national stage underscores the university’s growing  impact in advanced engineering education and hands-on, real-world innovation. 

About SUNY Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Poly) 

SUNY Polytechnic Institute, located in Utica, N.Y., is a vibrant and inclusive community where  students, faculty, and staff are empowered through a forward-looking STEAM education and  dynamic campus experience. As New York State’s premier public polytechnic, SUNY Poly fosters  innovation and interdisciplinary learning across its four colleges—Arts & Sciences, Business,  Engineering, and Health Sciences—preparing graduates to lead in a rapidly evolving global  landscape. 

Guided by a bold vision for societal impact, SUNY Poly advances use-inspired research and  transformative collaborations that drive economic development, technological progress, and  humanitarian solutions—locally in the Mohawk Valley and globally across diverse communities. For  more info, visit http://www.sunypoly.edu.

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