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Thursday, October 13, 2011

College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering

The College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering or (CEME) is the largest constituent college of the National University of Sciences and Technology, Pakistan.
Location
The campus is located on Peshawar Road, 13 km from the heart of Rawalpindi and 15 km from the center of Islamabad. It spans an area of 124 acres (0.50 km2). The campus consisting of training blocks, living accommodation for students, faculty and staff, stadium, auditorium, gymnasium, mosque, post office, bank, grocery store and a welfare shop.
Within Rawalpindi the buses plying from Rawalpindi Saddar and from Pirwadhai bus stand to Taxila pass by the college.
From other cities within Pakistan, travel can be via railway or the Daewoo Bus Service. The nearest airport is Benazir Bhutto International Airport, Pakistan.

 Student societies

Extracurricular activities include managing academic conferences, hosting charity shows and debating.
Societies include:
  • Linux Society
  • Oracle Society
  • Programmers Society
  • Sports and Adventure Society (SAS)
  • Society for Promotion of Electronic and Computer Engineering
  • Society for Promotion of Arts and Literature (SPAL)
  • Survey Society

 Student achievements

The Devrim II is the first ever hybrid car of Pakistan, designed and fabricated by students of NUST in 2010. A group of eleven engineering students from the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Department of Mechatronics Engineering and Department of Electrical Engineering , named as Pak-Wheelers, from E&ME College of NUST participated in the Shell Eco-marathon Asia in July 2010 with their Hybrid Car.[1] The group developed a hybrid car to participate in the Shell Eco-Marathon. [2]


 EME Alumni Association

EMEAA has 2500 members. The association was formed in 2005 to give a platform for old students to give back to college. EMEAA has a scholarship program, which awards scholarships to needy students of the college. EMEAA arranges an alumni reunion every year in the college. EMEAA also holds career counseling and publishes a study guide for students. EME Alumni Association has a web presence on Facebook, Yahoo Groups and EME Alumni.com

History


RCEME 1944
The Royal Canadian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers came into being officially on 15 May 1944, with the fusion of various elements from the Royal Canadian Engineers, Royal Canadian Army Service Corps and Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps, following the model of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (REME).
With the increase of mechanized equipment during World War II, the need to have one corps dedicated to service and maintenance thereof was becoming increasingly apparent. Trucks had become the de facto means of transportation and logistic support, armoured vehicles had replaced cavalry, weapons were becoming more complicated, as well as the advent of radios and radar, it was apparent that the previous model of having a different corps for each job was inadequate for a modern, mechanized army.
The majority of RCEME (pronounced /ˈriːmiː/ ree-mee, even though there is a "C" in it, just as "REME" is pronounced) technicians were, and still are, vehicle mechanics, but the original RCEME structure incorporated 25 different trades and sub-trades, employing specialists for each particular job in order to train and deploy them in time to meet the war's demand. While it was somewhat bulky, it was nonetheless a centralized structure for maintaining the Army's everyday equipment which was more efficient than the previous system of having each corps perform its own equipment maintenance, and also allowed for a greater degree of specialization within trades.