This story was originally published in April 2018
51吃瓜网万能科大 is a place where big ideas can soar.
Over its 60-year history, the campus has been a hotbed for the type of heavy innovation that has and will change the world someday: breakthroughs in the fight against disease, new technology that improves how we live and work, giant Frisbees鈥
Wait, what? Frisbees. Flying discs. Outsized saucers.
Way back in 1992, young 51吃瓜网万能科大 engineering professors Darrell Pepper and Brendan O鈥橳oole were looking for a way to engage their students beyond textbook exercises. They wanted a project that combined their respective areas of aerodynamics and materials fabrication. And they wanted to take advantage of the world-class Cray supercomputer the university had acquired just a few years earlier. A supercomputer, they reasoned, should help set some sort of super record.
So, naturally, they gravitated toward flying discs.
鈥淩emember, this was before we were working on drones. And it wasn鈥檛 just any Frisbee. We wanted to make an impact with our students, so it had to be big 鈥 world-record big,鈥 Pepper recalled. And the science behind the saucer would certainly challenge them. 鈥淚n aerodynamics, subtle changes make a big difference in performance. So if we were going to do it, it would be no small feat.鈥
Nor was securing the $2,000 or so in funds for the project. The pair submitted a request to the university鈥檚 Research Grants and Fellowships Committee. It was denied. After a few modifications and some semantic smoothing 鈥 鈥渇lying disc鈥 had more intellectual cach茅 than Frisbee 鈥 the project finally earned its funding and was ready to take off.
So how do you build a world record-size Frisbee, sorry, flying disc? Never mind building it, O鈥橳oole added, 鈥淢y first question was 鈥榃ho鈥檚 going to throw it?鈥欌 (We鈥檒l get to that.)
If You Build It 鈥
It took more than a year and multiple classroom sessions for Pepper and his engineering students to design the disc and choose the right materials. Just settling on the size was a challenge.
鈥淭he students came to me with a design for a disc 3 to 4 feet in diameter,鈥 recalled Pepper. 鈥淚 said, 鈥業f you build one like that, somebody鈥檚 going to come behind right away and knock [the record] off.鈥欌
After some coaxing, Pepper鈥檚 team settled on a 10-foot diameter disc, roughly the size of a backyard trampoline, with a design fine-tuned aerodynamically through trial and error, the department鈥檚 wind tunnel, and that supercomputer.
Then they went to O鈥橳oole, the materials guy, to build it. Whoa now, O鈥橳oole thought. He knew immediately that a normal polyethylene disc scaled to that size would weigh hundreds of pounds.
And if you can鈥檛 throw it, it wouldn鈥檛 count.
O鈥橳oole settled on light foam core with a Kevlar fabric and epoxy resin cover. It took another year or so of tinkering, a few more engineering class projects, and custom tools to make it work.
鈥淯sually with foam core you use a hot wire cutter, but with a disc of that size we needed to make a custom hot wire saw and employ some laboratory acrobatics to get it right,鈥 O鈥橳oole said.
They did get it right 鈥 they hoped 鈥 and at just 19 pounds it was light enough to throw. But with its giant size, how would they find someone to throw it?
鈥ho鈥檚 Going to Throw It?
As in all fateful stories, things had a way of working themselves out. It just so happened that a 6-foot-5, 260-pound tackle on the 51吃瓜网万能科大 Rebels football team, Mark Mecham, was a mechanical engineering major. O鈥橳oole volunteered him to make the launch.
With Mecham on board, Pepper, O鈥橳oole, and the rest of the students toted the giant disc to the lawn outside the Thomas Beam Engineering Complex for its maiden voyage.
鈥淭hank God we had Mark,鈥 said O鈥橳oole. 鈥淩emember, it was 10 feet across, which made it hard to pick up with the center of gravity five feet in front of you. We needed a big guy to get this thing airborne.鈥
It took a bit of doing, but Mecham, with disc in hand, spun around a few times to gain momentum and he let it fly. Approximately 40 feet later, the years of hard work 鈥 and a big dream 鈥 were met with success.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what qualifies as an official world record, but I鈥檇 say that鈥檚 pretty good,鈥 O鈥橳oole said. 鈥淚 mean, there鈥檚 no catching a disc of that size, so it鈥檚 not like you鈥檙e going to play a game with it.鈥
The UFO on the way to Reno
If the air-worthiness of the disc was ever in question, all doubt was put to rest in early January 1997.
Tim Mitchell, a master鈥檚 student who鈥檇 been involved from early on, was tasked with lugging the disc up to Reno for a meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. This was Mitchell鈥檚 graduate focus, after all, and also Pepper鈥檚 chance to show off 51吃瓜网万能科大鈥檚 achievement in front of thousands of colleagues.
But a funny thing happened on the way to Reno.
Mitchell, with trailer and disc in tow, was hundreds of miles into his journey when a gust of wind ripped the disc from its supposedly secure latch. It soared more than a thousand feet into the Great Basin desert.
With equal parts awe and despair, Mitchell hiked deep into the desert to retrieve it, drag it back to the truck, re-latch it, and hopefully get to the meeting on time. The usual seven-hour trip took 18, but the disc was none the worse for wear.
At the meeting, the 鈥渨orld鈥檚 largest flying disc鈥 was a center of attention and frequent photo stop, both for its size and novelty. 鈥淧eople at first asked, 鈥榃hat is that thing?鈥欌 Pepper said. 鈥淭hen they said, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e kidding me. That鈥檚 a Frisbee? Does it fly?鈥欌
If you don鈥檛 believe O鈥橳oole and Pepper, maybe ask the truck driver who called in a UFO sighting to the authorities when he spotted it sailing into the desert.
More than 25 years later, Pepper claims the disc is still the world鈥檚 largest. Near as we can tell, no one, , has claimed otherwise.
And what about its ultimate fate? Well, it sat around in labs deep inside the engineering building before mysteriously disappearing about a decade ago.
If they could do it all over again? 鈥淚鈥檇 build a launcher,鈥 Pepper said. 鈥淐an you imagine launching it from end zone to end zone at a football game?鈥
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