Autocar UK – 31 July 2019

(lu) #1

Value added


to the max


or some, Nissan’s


presence in the UK


is represented solely


by its Sunderland


super-factory, where


a Qashqai, Juke or Leaf rolls off the


line every two minutes. But when


Autocar-Courland Next Generation


Award winner Lewis Campbell


was sent to spend a month working


with the Japanese car maker, he was


directed towards the lesser-known


Nissan Technical Centre, an R&D


facility in Cranfield, Bedfordshire,


that is responsible for major


development work on the Qashqai


SUV and Leaf EV. We’ve caught up


with Campbell, now at the end of his


second of five four-week placements


really challenged. On the first week


there was a lot of information to


absorb; I was pretty nervous about


coming but the team have been so


good to me and whenever I needed


advice they were always there and


always made time for me – I never felt


like a chore to anybody.”


Jones also took the time to
take Campbell to the Sunderland

facility. “It was awe-inspiring,” says


Campbell. “Getting a tour of the place


and seeing the cars starting as a few


pieces of pressed metal to 15 minutes


later rolling off the production line as


a completed car was insane. I felt like


a kid in a candy shop.”


Campbell has also visited the


company’s Paddington-based


design studio, a facility responsible


for penning the Juke and Qashqai


concepts. “Being in the rooms where


some of the most recognisable


Nissans today were designed was


Autocar-Courland Next Generation Award winner Lewis


Campbell is at the end of his Nissan placement, during which


he learned valuable lessons in R&D, he tells Harry Roberts


PHOTOGR A PHY TEJ BHOLA


F


Lewis Campbell


worked on exterior


electronics at Nissan


he r e c e i v e d a s a r e s u lt of w i n n i n g t he


competition, to find out what he’s


been up to at Nissan.


“It’s been a million times better


than I could have imagined,” grins


the mechanical engineering student.


“I never thought I’d be able to see all


the different elements that make up


a brand with a global outreach as


great as Nissan’s.”


Campbell spent most of his four


weeks with the value engineering


team, a branch of R&D that, as he


explains, aims to “give more value to


the customer by adding new features


or r e - e n g i ne e r i n g a pa r t t o m a k e it


more efficient”.


More specifically, Campbell has


been working with the exterior


electronics department, which


has responsibility for anything


found on the exterior of a car that


is electronically operated such as


wing mirrors, wipers and cameras.


According to exterior systems senior


engineer Nicholas Jones, Campbell


w a s a ble t o “ t a k e a n ide a t h at w e


already had for a changeable part,


do the critical engineering and


development work with the supplier,


manage the timing plan, look at costs


and technical feasibility and then


bring it to the point where we’re now


ready to deliver that onto the car”.


T h i s c om me nd at ion of C a mpb e l l’s


performance virtually mirrors


c om me nt s he r e c e i v e d du r i n g


his first placement at McLaren


Automotive. “We gave him a real


technical problem to solve,” says


Jones. “We asked him to use critical


thinking and technical ability and


he’s really showcased his potential.”
Jones added his team has been

“very impressed” and that Campbell


has a “real critical eye for detail.


His ability to work not only as part


of a t e a m but a l s o i nd i v idu a l l y w it h


suppliers is second to none.”


However, it wasn’t all plain sailing


for the student whose anti-cloning


registration identification device


won him the Next-Gen Award. When


asked about the struggles he’s faced


ov e r t he pa s t fou r w e e k s , C a mpb e l l


s ay s: “I a c t u a l l y fe e l l i k e I ’ v e b e e n

Free download pdf