SecTech Roadshow is a touring trade show that covers 5 Australian state capitals over 2 weeks every year in May and draws 2000-2500
high-quality attendees. The compact size and local venues make SecTech Roadshow the perfect opportunity for installers and end users to get face time with leading suppliers and manufacturers and their solutions in a vibrant half-day.
DAS Revving Up For SecTech – Dicker DAS is revving up for SecTech Roadshow 2025 with news the DAS team will bring a Moto Trainer Ducati simulator to 5 Australian cities next May as part of its sponsorship of SecTech drinks!
Able to entertain up to 40 riders per hour, the Moto Trainer simulator was built in in tandem with MotoGP in Italy, is the official MotoGP licensed simulator, and the only simulator of its type in Australia.
The Moto Trainer was developed in partnership with MotoG not just for training but to bring the thrill of Grand Prix racing to bikers everywhere. According to MotoG, its software can transport riders virtually to the world’s greatest tracks.
Sensor technologies you’re looking for to resist light changes include optical filtering and signal processing in which algorithms analyse the frequency and pattern of detected signals, ignoring those inconsistent with thermal profiles of human movement.
Dual pyroelectric elements can be configured to detect slightly different heat patterns consistent with human thermal signatures, but they work best against artificial light sources. Dropping pulse count may help, but in our experience, this works best against localised triggers like birds, rather than global light changes.
Your best option might be to change the sensor direction so more of the scene is shaded during the day in order to reduce the impact of light changes. You might also install a PIR camera sensor to deliver alarm verification but it won’t stop alarm events occuring.
A monitoring station can make a decision about an alarm event based on the alarm trigger patterns. Light triggers typically occur occasionally on a single zone – often at the same time of day in a given season. We get them on a front balcony in the morning between 10-12, especially if there are gusty winds. Comparatively, an intruder will cause a cascade of triggers across multiple zones, generally at night.
We wandered the site with other tourists
The software monitors accelerator use, brakes, gearing, and trajectories as you lean into corners at an angle of up to 60 degrees, matching it to the onboard video. The system works with any motorcycle type – at SecTech these will be Ducatis.
Based on your riding skills, there are 4 levels that can be set on the simulator – beginner, intermediate, expert and professional rider. The software will monitor technique and help perfect it.
Dicker DAS is one of Australia’s leading electronic security distributors, with branches in every state and a product spread covering access control, alarms, CCTV, automation, management software, and a particular strength in networked solutions.
Attendees will get a chance to experience the MotoG simulator at SecTech Roadshow from 3.30pm in Brisbane on May 8, Sydney on May 15, Melbourne on May 20, Adelaide on Thursday, May 22 and Perth on May 27.
SecTech Roadshow 2025 exhibitors include Inner Range, Aiphone, HID, BGW Technologies, ISCS, Dahua, ICT, CRK, NAS Australia, Dicker DAS, EOS Australia, ASSA ABLOY, TP-Link, Allegion, Hikvision, VSP, Gallagher, Stentofon, Bluechip and Nemtek.
“For manufacturers and distributors wanting exposure to 5 Australian markets at very low cost – a 3 x 3 metre stand in 5 cities is just $A23,000, including all logistics and with zero hidden costs,” said organiser, Monique Keatinge.
