News article
Apprentice’s calm thinking pays off in Flying Spanners
An Alice Springs heavy vehicle apprentice and his boss have demonstrated that calm thinking under pressure is the way to win the Red CentreNATS flying spanners competition.
CJD Equipment second-year apprentice Ethan Staniforth and local branch manager Adam Britten took 23 minutes and 3 seconds to dismantle and rebuild a motor vehicle engine to win the fourth annual Flying Spanners grand final on Sunday.
In doing so, they upstaged their more fancied interstate opponents whose time in the heats – 16 minutes and 8 seconds – broke the record set last year of 17 minutes and 33 seconds.
But the Tasmanian pairing, Tobias Micek and Trent O’Shea, encountered a dislodged rocker bridge in the final, which cost them vital minutes. Until that point, they had been the front runners in the two-team contest.
Charles Darwin University Alice Springs-based Automotive Engineering teacher Russ Horan, who co-judged the final, congratulated the 14 participants for their courage to have a go.
“Overall it was probably the best Flying Spanners we’ve run,” Mr Horan said.
“In each of the four years that we’ve run this competition, CDU Automotive apprentices have made the final, and in three of those years they have been part of the winning team.
“It’s one thing to know your way around an engine, but you also need steady hands and the ability to think clearly under pressure. The real trick is to not be in too much of a hurry.”
Mr Horan said the winners had won two tickets to next year’s Summernats car festival in Canberra and $1000 vouchers for flights and accommodation.
Related Articles
Global sewage study reveals condition of Darwin’s harbour
A global study of sewage contamination in harbours, with samples taken from 18 cities across five continents, has revealed that faecal contamination of Darwin Harbour from sewage is very low compared to the rest of the world.
Read more about Global sewage study reveals condition of Darwin’s harbourTransport study reveals why journey is as important as the destination
A days’ long canoe voyage along the Arnhem Land coast can now be completed within hours in a tinnie, but accelerating movement has unique and complex implications for Indigenous peoples’ relationship with their ancestral Country, according to a new research paper.
Read more about Transport study reveals why journey is as important as the destinationWalk more, drink less – a Nutritionist’s guide to the silly season
With obesity surpassing tobacco as the leading risk factor for disease in 2024, Charles Darwin University’s new Head of Nutrition and Dietetics is encouraging Australians to balance the joy this silly season.
Read more about Walk more, drink less – a Nutritionist’s guide to the silly season