Kiwi drone start-up takes out innovation award in Las Vegas
Kiwi drone start-up takes out innovation award in Las
Vegas
Callaghan Innovation
22 April 2016
A group of guys from east Auckland has won big in Las Vegas, but not at the blackjack table.
Auckland drone designer Dotteral has won respected screen industry media outlet Newsshooters’ Most Innovative Product award at National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) Show - the US's premier broadcasting fair in Las Vegas attracting over 100,000 participants and visitors from around the globe.
Dotteral, run by Matt and Seamus Rowe, Sean Pentecost, Will Barker and Steve Barr, was a finalist in Callaghan Innovation's C-Prize, a competition established to stimulate and develop creative solutions for use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, or drones) for use in the screen industry.
While they didn’t win, their creative
solution to reducing UAV noise earned them a place at the
Callaghan Innovation New Zealand pavilion at the NAB Show,
where they are exhibiting for the first time.
Seamus Rowe
says the idea which caught Newsshooters’ eye was a
combination of ‘shrouds’ which mask propeller noise and
noise-cancelling technology.
"We make drones quieter
– that’s why they’re called drones – because
they’re named after the sound – and the issue is that
when you fly over people shooting with mics, it ruins the
sound."
Rowe says winning the award has been "sweet" and
that the exposure gained will help promote the company
internationally.
“For a small New Zealand company
to be named is a big thing – for the rest of the world to
know about us is amazing – because once people know you,
and you can say you’ve won an award people are eager to
work with you.
"Without going to trade shows you’d
never have the chance to meet, ordinarily contact is just
emailing back and forth, but through face to face
conversations we can really get stuff done."
Dotteral's technology reduces drone engine sounds which prove a problem for filmmakers when shooting scenic aerial footage, meaning the noise has to be taken out in post-production taking time and money.
Rowe says,
"We started the company last year with funding from the
C-prize – without the C-prize we wouldn't have started -
it gives people with big ideas opportunities".
ends