KidWind Wind Energy Training Camp Concludes as Students Gear Up for the Asia League Southern Taiwan Regional
The KidWind Asia League Southern Taiwan Regional training camp, co-hosted by the Association and group member Little Stark Laboratory, concluded successfully in Tainan on August 29. The intensive five-day program (August 25–29) was taught by AESEA Supervisor Mr. Wu Ming-Te, who guided 7 student teams (28 participants in total) through building wind power devices and developing renewable-energy engineering skills in preparation for the KidWind competition.
Mr. Wu designed the course around hands-on practice. Students began by assembling small wind-power models, then moved on to crafting turbine blades, using dedicated jigs and self-adhesive vinyl film to build model-aircraft-grade blades. Gearbox assembly put the students' precision to the test, requiring repeated fine-tuning of screws and gears — a lesson in engineering rigor. Mr. Wu stressed the importance of precision, using the example of "multiplying 0.99 by itself again and again" to illustrate how tiny errors compound.
On the final day, a standardized wind tunnel test simulated competition conditions, allowing students to adjust their builds in real time and gain valuable feedback. The camp laid a solid technical foundation and instilled an engineering spirit of rigor, iteration, and precision. The results will be on display at the KidWind Southern Taiwan Regional on October 4 — we look forward to seeing the students excel.

