In addition to maintaining an interface with Allen and Wilson throughout race weekends, the interns work under the direct leadership of race and championship winning engineer Rick Cameron.
"The interns are doing a great job, and Ricky is leading them the right way," Wilson said. "We’re going to start having them do some homework before we come to the races, that way they can actually contribute when we get here and give us some spreadsheets of what they think we should be doing."
The establishment of Capstone Motorsports continues an evolution for Allen and the UA Engineering internship program which has been an at-track technical curriculum the last couple of years. Prell is in his third season as a UA intern.
"What’s great about this program is that it does give us that real world experience," said Prell, who graduates from UA next year with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering. "We’re at the race track, we’re working on the car and we’re interacting with all of these people out here: the engineers and the business and marketing people, and that’s not something we get in the classroom. We have several automotive design teams through the Society of Automotive Engineers and the Eco Car Mobility challenges, and those are great, but we’re wanting to accelerate and enhance the learning for the students, especially in the field of motorsports. The program that John Allen is setting up through Capstone is really beneficial for us. We're seeing things that not many students around the country ever think of experiencing, so this is a fantastic program."
Next up for Capstone Motorsports in the Pirelli GT4 America series is Rounds 3 and 4 of the series with a doubleheader at Circuit of The Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, April 30 – May 2.