Dayton company’s robot reaps award

Companion robot recognized in R&D magazine awards
Meet Obi. Obi is a robot that can assist people with mobility impairments with eating. It can be programmed to lift a spoon laden with properly sized food portions to a person’s mouth. THOMAS GNAU/STAFF

Meet Obi. Obi is a robot that can assist people with mobility impairments with eating. It can be programmed to lift a spoon laden with properly sized food portions to a person’s mouth. THOMAS GNAU/STAFF

A small company led by a University of Dayton mechanical engineering graduate has reaped a key honor for a newly invented companion robot.

The robot, dubbed “Obi,” can help people with mobility challenges. The device can be programmed to smoothly lift a spoon laden with food to a person’s mouth.

Produced by a consumer robotics company that calls itself “Desin,” Obi was a winner in the 54th annual R&D 100 awards, arranged by R&D magazine, in the awards’ “mechanical and materials” category.

“Obi’s key functionality is a robotic arm that can select virtually any properly sized food from one of four compartments and deliver it to a position where the diner can eat from the spoon,” said the company in a press release. “The pace and selection of each bite is controlled by the user. Sophisticated programming collects a spoonful in a graceful manner that mimics a person’s instinctive use of silverware.”

Jon Dekar, a UD graduate and the company’s president and co-founder, said Gem City Engineering — near Desin’s Dayton offices at the Entrepreneurs Center in the Tech Town business park — is beginning to produce the robots.

Powered by a rechargeable battery, Desin says its Obi holds enough energy to serve four to six meals on a single charge. “Obi also fits within the confines of a dinner placemat, operates quietly and can be carried with ease like a laptop computer,” the company said in a release.

Desin says it is offering trials of Obi, along with direct-to-customer in-house rental and leasing options to make the device — currently with a retail price of $4,500 — more accessible to users without working through a third party health care equipment or finance organization.

Purchase, lease and rental information are available at www.meetobi.com.

Obi was also named a finalist in the 2016 International Design Excellence Awards earlier this year.

Six-year-old Desin is based in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. with operations in Michigan and Ohio. The company is privately-held and is funded by individual and institutional investors.

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