Celebrating 10 Years of Innovative, Affordable & Accurate Technology

by Tyler Scaturro August 12, 2019

Celebrating 10 Years of Innovative, Affordable & Accurate Technology

Below, are excerpts from The Press Democrat August 9, 2019 article titled: Pocket Radar’s speed-tracking devices help athletes track pitching and hitting velocity

Written by Martin Espinoza

Company culture:

Pocket Radar co-founders Chris Stewart, Steve Goody and Grant Moulton wax nostalgic when they recall their early days as young Hewlett Packard engineers.

It’s like they’re speaking of a long-forgotten era when everyone had their own workbenches with unlimited access to electronics testing equipment and resources. Budding inventors could consult with technology gurus.

It was a culture they said was fueled by creativity first and rewarded by money later. That was before the dominance of venture capital and exit strategies. And that’s exactly the business environment the three veteran tech inventors sought to foster when they started their Santa Rosa tech company.

“This is all about building the right environment, where creative people can thrive,” said Stewart, Pocket Radar’s president and chief operating officer.

Founders background:

Stewart is now a volunteer instructor at Sonoma State University and last year became the entrepreneur in residence for SSU’s school of economics. Stewart said his work with Sonoma State is his way of giving back and nurturing young inventors.

“We’re looking to build a culture of long-term innovation for the local area,” Stewart said.

Moulton, Pocket Radar’s chief technical officer, joined Hewlett Packard right out of college and several years later hired Stewart and brought him into his engineering group. Moulton later left HP and joined Next Level Communications, where he worked on high-speed optical and digital communications leading a team of several engineers.

It was at Next Level when Moulton met Goody. When the latter went to work for Cerent, Moulton followed but kept in touch with Stewart.

Choosing Radar:

The three remained Sonoma County friends, meeting weekly for several years, plotting their next move. During that time, they toyed with a number of inventions and designs before they decided to innovate the radar gun. The primary consideration, they said, was choosing a product that could not be easily copied by global tech companies with far more resources.

“We intentionally chose the radar (gun) because it was much harder to build,” Moulton said.

The conventional radar gun’s technology is based on the doppler effect, bouncing microwaves radiation off moving objects to calculate speed. Moulton, who designed all of Pocket Radar’s electronics boards, said making the radar gun smaller was the first big task.

The design team ultimately reduced the devices main circuitry to the size and thickness of a credit card.

The end result was the Pocket Radar Classic model, a multiple purpose speed tracker launched in 2010 for $199. At the time, most radar guns cost up to $1,000.

Highlighting Tom Brady's use with the Ball Coach Radar:

In late June, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady used Pocket Radar’s Ball Coach to send a message to ESPN commentator Max Kellerman, who had notoriously claimed the 6-time Super Bowl champion was “falling off a cliff.”

Brady posted to Instagram a screenshot of the Ball Coach with the radar display showing 61 mph, for the speed he can still throw a football.

Looking back and moving forward:

It’s been a rapid pace of growth for the enterprise. The company has launched eight products in 8 years, all the while growing the customer base. A decade after the firm’s launch, many local schools now have one of its radar guns for use by sports coaches.

“In the last 10 years, we’ve rapidly democratized the radar gun, we made it accessible to the masses,” Stewart said.

Going forward, the Pocket Radar team says they are focused on continuing to build their brand in the sports arena.

“The overall sports tech industry is growing like crazy right now and we are focused on making high value technology available to the broad market at an affordable cost,” Stewart said.

Check out the entire article here: Pocket Radar’s speed-tracking devices help athletes track pitching and hitting velocity

https://www.pressdemocrat.com/

If you have any questions or would like to share your Pocket Radar stories, please give is a call toll-free at 888-381-2672 from 9 AM to 5 PM Pacific Time, or e-mail us at Info@PocketRadar.com

Tyler Scaturro
Tyler Scaturro

Brand Manager (2012 - current)


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