They might only be teenagers but four high school students have already come up with their first invention – and it has won an award at the Fieldays Innovation Awards.
The crankholder is set to revolutionise the fencing industry ... or at least make it much easier to build a fence.
Created by Ben McColgan, Connor Gordon, Angus Kelly and Hugh Jackson from St Paul’s Collegiate School in Hamilton, the crankholder makes drilling fence post holes easier and less labour-intensive.
It attaches to either a trailer, quad bike or tractor and works by steadying a post hole borer which can be jumpy and therefore dangerous.
Mr McColgan said the crankholder makes it possible for a fence post hole to be drilled by one person instead of two, making fencing cheaper, easier and safer.
The four Year 13 students came up with the idea after one of their fathers, a farmer, complained about post hole drilling.
"He found it really taxing and said we should come up with a device so the four of us put our heads together and came up with the concept. We went through three prototypes before we got to this one."
The invention won the Fieldays Young Innovator of the Year award at an innovation awards breakfast at the national agricultural expo today.
The boys, aged 17 and 18, had already had success in the "crocodile pit" at St Paul’s where they presented the invention earlier this year.
They hope to enter the crankholder in another national award later in the year run by Young Enterprise.
Mr Gordon said the next step was to patent the crankholder and begin selling the product.
He said feedback to the exhibit at Fieldays had been overwhelmingly positive.
"We've had quite a bit of interest. A lot of people are giving us tips on how to develop it further. A lot of people have been saying it’s a neat idea and saying there’s a massive gap in the market and they wish they'd come up with this idea 30 years ago."
The teens will present the crankholder to fencers at Fieldays competing in the Golden Pliers competition tomorrow for further feedback.
In total 70 entries were made to the Fieldays Innovations Awards with the trend toward mobile apps and data collection software as the industry keeps up with technological advancements.
Fieldays chief executive Peter Nation said the level of ingenuity was second to none.
"It’s great to see the number of Innovations entrants growing every year. You're looking at innovations today that could very well revolutionise agribusiness tomorrow."
He said the inventors were tuned into innovation in a big way.
"We don't grow, we don't advance without stopping and asking the pertinent questions about where we are, how we got here and what it will take to move forward.
"Looking around the Innovations Centre today, the right questions are being addressed."