Its always sunny in the Coliseum
If you’ve been getting your weather forecasts from the thermometer at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, you’ve really been walking on sunshine.
If youve been getting your weather forecasts from the thermometer at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, youve really been walking on sunshine: Every day, without fail, has been a pleasant 70 degrees.
Tired of seeing the inaccurate reading calibrated on the Coliseums thermometer, USC Viterbi School of Engineering student David Cape decided it was time for an update.
Installed in 1955, the legendary stadiums thermometer was a symbol of art deco beauty a minimal statement of elegance at the face of the stadiums entrance.
But over the past few decades, the thermometer eventually became an unlikely poster child of the Coliseums apparent disrepair: After its mechanical failure, the thermometers components were gutted, and they were never replaced.
Cape, a member of the USC drumline, spent day after day marching throughout the facility.
And as chance would have it, his final hurrah as a mechanical engineering student would be inextricably bound to the fate of the thermometer.
Last summer, Cape, along with two other student groups (one team per senior design class), submitted proposals to fix the thermometer an idea gleaned from a senior project suggestion list in the Department of Mechanical Engineering.
We could choose something from that list or create something new, Cape said. I was really excited about this project.
After teaming up with Charles Palmer, Ryan Magruder and Andrew Ezarik, Cape led the group with a budget of $300. Eventually, they created the prototype that would win over professors Yann Staelens and Charles Radovich, as well as Los Angeles Coliseum Commission (LACC) interim General Manager John Sandbrook and Project Manager Robert Joyner.
What was initially a modest proposal became an opportunity to work with a more sophisticated budget and a beefier system. At a budget estimate of $280, Cape and his team originally proposed a system that would have moved the thermometers needle.
The LACC decided to allot a $1,000 budget that would enable the students to include various things the commission wanted, including a battery backup in case of power failure.
[LACC] really liked the idea of the thermometer going to 70 because its been that way for years so if the power goes out or you turn the power off, [the thermometer needle] automatically goes back to 70 degrees and then shuts itself off.
Today, thanks to Capes team, the new thermometer system is mainly software-controlled. Theres a black box that takes in sensor readings, which then outputs controls for the motor. The system averages two disparate temperatures one from a sensor housed within the concrete of the roof and one located in a consistently cool, shady area.
For now, the team continues to put the finishing touches on the new system, a labor of love for Cape and his partners.
I thought itd be really cool to end my senior project with fixing the place I spent most of my Saturdays, he said.
Someday soon, generations of students spending their weekends at the Coliseum may actually see the temperature go above or below 70 degrees that is, unless the weather really is that great.