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The Timken Company and Clemson University jointly announce that Dr. John C. Ziegert will hold The Timken Chair in Automotive Design and Development at the Carroll A. Campbell Graduate Engineering Center at the Clemson University International Center for Automotive Research (CU-ICAR).
Ziegert will lead research initiatives in analysis and design of precision machining for automotive applications and coordinate collaborative research and development projects between the university's R&D resources and Timken's on-site engineering group. Ziegert currently holds the Ebaugh Chair in mechanical and aerospace engineering at the University of Florida and is president of Tetra Precision Inc., a Florida-based metrology company. Timken will contribute $3 million to an endowment to support the graduate program at CU-ICAR, a joint facility with co-founders and endowment contributors BMW, a German-based automaker, and Michelin, a French-based tire company. Clemson has been approved for $5 million in state funds through the Research Centers of Economic Excellence Act to help support the Timken chair. Located on a 250-acre site in Greenville, the CU-ICAR facility is designed as a global center of academic and industry expertise in automobile manufacturing, safety and powertrain development. "John brings a valuable mix of industry experience and academic leadership to the endowment," said Jacqui Dedo, president - automotive - Timken. "We look forward to working with John to combine the knowledge and innovation of our on-site Timken associates with that of Clemson's R&D community to develop friction management and power transmission solutions that will transform not only the automotive industry, but other industrial markets as well." "I'm thrilled to have the opportunity to join the CU-ICAR team and am grateful for the generous support of The Timken Company for this chair," said Ziegert. "I look forward to close collaborations with Timken and all of the CU-ICAR partners. Because of the significant investments and visionary thinking of Clemson, the state of South Carolina and the CU-ICAR corporate sponsors, we have the opportunity to create a truly world-class automotive research and education facility, while developing a highly trained automotive engineering workforce." Ziegert earned a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering at Purdue University, an M.S. from Northwestern University and a Ph.D. from the University of Rhode Island. He started his career as a project engineer at General Motors and has held academic appointments at the University of Hawaii, Brown University, Roger Williams University, University of Rhode Island and the California Institute of Technology. He joined the University of Florida faculty in 1990.
As a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and past-president of the American Society for Precision Engineering, Ziegert has received many national awards, including the National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award, which recognizes outstanding young faculty in the fields of science and engineering. He has authored or co-authored more than 80 journal and conference papers, holds three patents, with three more currently pending, and has completed more than $7 million in externally sponsored research grants and contracts at the University of Florida. About CU-ICAR At the Clemson University International Center for Automotive Research, public and private partners are working with the university to develop the technologies, processes and workforce of the future. Anchoring the research campus is the Campbell Graduate Engineering Center, which will focus on systems integration -- the increasing complex interaction of electrical, digital and mechanical technologies in automobiles and many other manufacturing platforms. The Timken Chair in Automotive Design and Development is one of four endowed chairs that will form the academic core of CU-ICAR. Clemson will begin its new Ph.D. degree program in automotive engineering with an emphasis on systems integration this fall and an M.S. degree program in 2007. Since the groundbreaking, CU-ICAR has generated more than $215 million in investments and pledges from the state of South Carolina, the Clemson University Real Estate Foundation, and major industry partners including BMW, Michelin, SAE International, Sun Microsystems and Timken. By summer 2007, the first phase of development -- Technology Neighborhood I -- will be complete, accounting for more than 500 new jobs. About The Timken Company The Timken Company keeps the world turning, with innovative ways to make customers' products run smoother, faster and more efficiently. Timken's highly engineered bearings, alloy steels and related products and services turn up everywhere. With operations in 27 countries, sales of $5.2 billion in 2005 and 27,000 employees, Timken is Where You Turn� for better performance. (Image provided by Clemson University and Timken.)
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