Scott Bolduc
Founder of Electronic Mobility Controls

Scott Bolduc, the founder of Electronic Mobility Controls and the AEVIT™ 2.0 System, has contributed incalculable innovations to the automotive drive-by-wire industry. Through research and experimentation, he has created technology that continues to this day to provide freedom and mobility to all levels of disability. This technology also has practical applications for private, military, and commercial sectors. In the years since its inception, he has created an impressive company that has become known as the leader in adaptive driving technology. As a boy, Scott grew up in Waterville, Maine where he showed an interest in invention from a very early age.


At only 10 years old, Scott made a fuel gauge for his parent’s kerosene tank in their basement. The idea was so innovative that Honeywell, a thermostat manufacturer, paid him for his idea. At the age of 15, Scott was afforded the opportunity to watch the Apollo launch at NASA by winning a prize for writing a scientific essay. As a senior at Waterville High School, he earned a 4-year scholarship from the Air Force to attend the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida. While in his 20’s, Scott's close friend, Dale Crafts, was involved in a motorcycle accident and became quadriplegic.


Scott realized that the same technology could be adapted to the automotive sector. This would allow people to interface with their transportation in a similar way. He envisioned an electronic user interface that would integrate the gas, brakes, steering, and secondary controls into one system that could be operated by a user with limited physical mobility. With this idea Scott begin breaking new ground on a one of a kind system that would finally give people with limited mobility the freedom they deserved.


On August 29, 1994 Scott received a patent for a single unit system for controlling gas and brake. This system would ultimately come to be known as the EGB (Electronic Gas Brake). In the early 2000’s, EMC took a massive step forward by developing and patenting the AEVIT™ (Advanced Electronic Vehicle Interface Technology) System. Scott has always been extremely passionate about safety. Electronic Mobility Control's product line is no exception to that passion as it has undergone extensive testing including The TUV and ISO-9001. The next advancement would come on December 15, 2005 when Scott received a patent for the first Auxiliary Battery System (Aux-Bat). Keeping with Scott's passion for safety, the auxiliary battery provides redundancy in the system. When all else fails, your AEVIT™ System does not; you'll have enough power to get to a safe location.

