"Any improvements that can be made to make them more stable and quieter would enable them to be used for a wider variety of world class shots."
Three of the VorTech team - Ben McLaren, Nishaad Salvapantula, and Ryan Kurte, are employed in the tech sector in Auckland while the fourth member, Simon Corkery, is studying offshore.
Competition judge, Linda Bulk, who is chief executive of Raglan-based UAV company Aeronavics, said the VorTech prototype still outshone the other competitors, being "out of the box and innovative and if it all works out, could have a real world application to it."
Bulk's company last year became one of only two drone systems to be granted US Federal Aviation Authority exemption to be used for film and television work in Hollywood, sparking demand for its product.
VorTech is doing further work to produce a working prototype which it expects to complete by the first quarter of next year when a number of parties in the film industry would be interested to see how it has developed, Bulk said.
The team won $50,000 and an expenses-paid trip to exhibit its drone at the 2016 National Association of Broadcasters trade show in Law Vegas, the largest international trade show for media content and technology.
(BusinessDesk receives assistance from Callaghan Innovation to cover the commercialisation of innovation).