Why NASA And Apple Are Using This Startup To Test Their Electronics More Efficiently – Forbes

Liquid Instruments, led by Daniel Shaddock (far left) and Danielle Wuchenich (far right), has a ... [+] sleek solution to help companies test their electronics faster and cheaper.

When Danielle Wuchenich hatched the idea for measurement startup Liquid Instruments, she was not chasing worldly success but a faster process for discovering the secrets of space. Her solutiona tool which jams 12 different electrical signal and frequency instruments into a single deviceended up being useful on Earth, with Apple, NASA and Texas Instruments employing the tool to ensure that the electronics theyre developing work.

Now Liquid Instruments chief strategy officer, Wuchenich was a graduate student at Australian National University, working on creating a tool called a phasemeter to measure gravitational waves in space, something only of use to high-level researchers. But in conducting the routine electrical measurements required for her research, she encountered a problem: Every time she wanted to measure voltage over time, signal frequency or signal transmission, Wuchenich had to rely on separate devices with separate software and user interfaces, each with hefty price tags. To avoid this headache, Wuchenich programmed the high-tech phasemeter to do multiple kinds of measurements. In so doing, Wuchenich landed on a universally viable application for an otherwise esoteric product.

Over three years, a twelve-person founding teamconsisting of Wuchenich, her lab mates and principal investigator CEO Daniel Shaddockturned prototype into product. Liquid Instruments began selling its device, dubbed Moku:Lab, in 2017, an 8-inch tool the company argues is not only more efficient than the competition, but cheaper. Moku:Lab costs $6,500, whereas all the tools the device replaces cost up to $60,000, the company estimates. Shaddock says the product has the potential to fundamentally change the test and measurement industry.

In the old days you had a typewriter for writing letters and a calculator for calculating. And they did the job pretty well. Then along came the computer, and it can write letters, it can calculate things, but it can do a whole lot more,says Shaddock. Weve stumbled upon the formula for the computer for the test and measurement industry.

So far, investors and scientists are buying it. The startup has raised $10.1 million from Anzu Partners, ANU Connect Ventures and Australian Capital Ventures Limited at a valuation of $33.7 million, with its 2018 revenue coming to around $750,000, according to Wuchenich. And Liquid boasts some big-name customers, including NASA, Texas Instruments, Apple and Nvidia.

Despite this early success, Robert W. Baird & Co. analyst Richard Eastman says Liquid Instruments faces a tough challenge breaking into an oligopoly dominated by five major companiesKeysight, Rohde & Schwarz, Tektronix, National Instruments and Anritsu. With several of these large players also selling single pieces of hardware that can make multiple measurements, Eastman is skeptical Liquid Instruments can make a dent. Im not sure it looks disruptive, Eastman says.

Also, Liquid Instruments will need to prove it offers comparable precision to its rivals. J. Max Cortner, president of the Instrument & Measurement Society, says while Liquid Instruments offers a unique product, its specs are in mainstream ranges, which may not be good enough for its customer base of highly trained researchers. Thats going to be their dividing line, their frontier. How do they expand this easy-to-use concept into the physical extremes? Cortner says.

Wuchenich is hoping Moku:Labs ready-to-use software and a specialized computer chip called FPGA will separate it from the competition. She notes whatever Liquid Instruments loses on precision, it more than compensates with its low price point. Bottom linecustomers don't want/can't afford to overpay for specs they dont need, she wrote in an email.

Itll be an uphill battle for a small startup like Liquid Instruments to compete with behemoths whose customers have been loyal for decades. But for Colonel Brian Neff, who heads the department of electrical engineering at the U.S. Air Force Academy and uses Moku:Lab to train his students, Liquid Instruments is a formidable challenger.

There are advantages to this new way of thinking that Id love to see some of the other players adopt, and if they dont adopt, then I think its thats just more promising for a company like Liquid Instruments to be able to come in and innovate a solution that hasnt really been done to this point, Neff says.

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Why NASA And Apple Are Using This Startup To Test Their Electronics More Efficiently - Forbes

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