Visit OSU Columbus Campus with 2018 Machinery Interns

Crops and Machinery Internship 2018

Agricultural Engineering

To be our machinery intern, we must let you know Ohio State’s agricultural engineering program, which prepares students for careers in industries and agencies providing engineering inputs and services to agricultural production. Though the Agricultural Engineering curriculum focuses on agriculture-related themes, agricultural engineers graduate with an extremely versatile set of skills and knowledge.
OSU Agricultural Engineering degree allows students to focus on one of three areas: soil and water, structures and facilities, and machinery systems. For machinery systems, students learn to design machinery to increase agricultural production with less labor and energy, while emphasizing safety and environmental benefits. Students study mechanical systems for producing crops, material handling and transportation, precision agriculture, GPS/GIS applications, computerized controls, lasers, digital imaging, and robotics.
Our program co-ordinator, Mr. John Beardmore, lead the intern group to visit the OSU Agricultural Machinery Building. He introduced the history of agri-machinery development and show our interns the amazing machines that displayed on campus.

2018 The Ohio Program Crop Production and Machinery Internship

OSU Agricultural Engineering Building

John Introducing the SMV Emblem

The Slow Moving Vehicle (SMV) Emblem
Plaque Wording: Historic Landmark of Agricultural Engineering - Slow Moving Vehicle (SMV) Emblem Makes Significant Contributions to Agricultural and Highway Safety Worldwide.
1961- 1963 Developed by Kenneth A. Harkness, Department of Agricultural Engineering on The Ohio State University campus;
1964 Became an ASAE Standard;
1968 Specified in National Uniform Vehicle Code;
1971 First Asabe Standard ratified by American National Standards Institute (ANSI). Became Occupation Safety And Health Act (OSHA) Regulation;
Ohio Farm and Home Safety Committee provided leadership in achieving acceptance dedicated 1992.

Athletic Center

The Woody Hayes Athletic Center is an indoor athletics training facility of OSU. It was dedicated in November 1987, in memory of Woody Hayes, Ohio State's football coach.

The Woody Hayes Athletic Center

The indoor field are used for the football, baseball, softball, lacrosse and soccer teams training.The weight room / a training room that is available for Ohio State sports teams.The northern corridor and atrium are adorned with Ohio State Buckeyes football history, including Big Ten and national championship team displays, Heisman Trophiesand photos of All-Americans and Academic All-Americans, and is the only part of the facility open to the public.

Trophy Room

The Ohio State Buckeyes football team is a college football team that competes as part of the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, representing Ohio State University in the East Division of the Big Ten Conference. Ohio State has played their home games at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio since 1922.

Ohio Buckeyes and Mascot Brutus

Ohio Stadium - Our ‘Shoe

Ohio Stadium has reflected the changing ambitions and enthusiasms of the Ohio State community and the nation at large. Completed in 1922, built in little over a year for a little more than $1 million, the Stadium was to unite students and fans in displays of wholesome athleticism, had a seating capacity of 66,210. In 2014, additional seat were added, raising the official capacity to 104,944.
Ohio Stadium is the largest stadium by capacity in the state of Ohio, the third largest football stadium in the United States, and the fourth largest non-racing stadium in the world. Throughout its history, the Stadium has accommodated social, economic and technological change, and remains the spot where fans get together to show their devotion to OSU.

Ohio Stadium

John introducing Ohio football to interns