

BEng Automotive and Motorsport Engineering with Foundation Year
About this course
Automotive and motorsport engineering is the discipline concerned with the design, development, and performance optimisation of road vehicles and racing cars. It draws on mechanical engineering, aerodynamics, materials science, and electronic systems to address the challenges of performance, safety, efficiency, and reliability that define both the consumer automotive industry and the motorsport sector. The UK has a particularly strong motorsport industry, with a concentration of teams and specialist companies along what is sometimes called Motorsport Valley in the East Midlands, and the field offers genuinely exciting career opportunities for graduates with the right technical skills. At the University of Huddersfield, this four-year, full-time programme is available with a foundation year, providing an initial year of academic and technical preparation for students who need to build their engineering foundations before entering the main degree. A sandwich year and work placement are also part of the programme structure, giving you substantial professional experience before your final year. You will study core engineering principles alongside specialist topics in vehicle dynamics, powertrains, aerodynamics, and motorsport technology, developing both the theoretical understanding and the practical skills that employers in these sectors value. The typical entry tariff of 120 points reflects the foundation year entry requirements. Graduates from automotive and motorsport engineering programmes work across a wide range of organisations. Formula racing teams, road car manufacturers, Tier 1 and Tier 2 automotive suppliers, performance vehicle companies, and defence contractors all employ engineers with this background. Roles include design engineer, vehicle dynamics engineer, performance analyst, and powertrain engineer. The skills developed on this degree are also transferable into broader mechanical and systems engineering roles in sectors including aerospace, energy, and manufacturing. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in automotive engineering, motorsport engineering, or mechanical engineering to develop specialist expertise.
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