Budding family business: Serial cannabis entrepreneur pioneers microwave drying tech with his father
December 8, 2020 | Channa Steinmetz
In Michael Wilson’s childhood, he recalled, the founder of multiple cannabis-related startups got into fights at school — then suspended — resulting in numerous car rides with his father as the elder Wilson ventured on sales trips.
“From age 7 or 8, I had an education on how to do business, interact with people and relate to customers,” Wilson said. “That bond between me and him drove who I became as a person and who I became in business.”
So when the serial cannabis entrepreneur began exploring solutions to a drying problem within his industry — without properly drying and preserving the cannabis plant, it can grow mold and bacteria and become worthless — Wilson turned to a tech expert he knew well.
His father, Rob.
A more-than-35-year veteran of the microwave industry and a co-patent holder on the microwave technology Microwave Assisted Thermal Sterilization (MATS), Rob had a natural curiosity about cannabis when his son first entered the industry, Wilson recalled.
Click here to learn more about United American Hemp, Michael Wilson’s initial foray into cannabis as a business venture. United American Hemp was one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020.
“He was asking all the right questions, and that allowed this idea [of using microwaves] to spark and brew over time,” Wilson said. “As father and son, there’s this infinite curiosity and complete confidence in one another to pursue knowledge and develop expertise. It fortunately worked out that we could do that together in a new, budding industry.”
Together, they formed A-10, a cannabis research and design firm in partnership with AMTEK microwave systems to deliver a state-of-the-art cannabis drying system.
“A-10’s first product that we’ve helped innovate and bring to the market is microwave technology,” said Wilson. “Through designing and engineering, our goal is to accelerate the future of cannabis.”
Click here to learn more about A-10.
“The traditional way [to dry cannabis] is you would hang dry the product like you would tobacco,” Wilson said. “Air drying allows the water to evaporate, but that can take two and a half weeks. A lot can happen in two and a half weeks — a series of products run rancid, bugs get in, it could get stolen.”
The other option for farmers is to use a propane or butane system, which can add harmful residues and destroy the quality of the product, Wilson noted.
A-10 offers a safer and more efficient drying system, the duo said.
Industry and environmental impacts
Through A-10’s past year of research and its most recent lab results provided by Steep Hill, Wilson found that cannabinoid content increased about 11 percent in the AMTEK microwave systems, whereas terpenes decreased by 13 percent.
The cannabinoid content is important because too high of a percentage can cause the product to cross the legal limit, Wilson noted. As for terpenes, farmers want to keep the percentage high because of their significant medicinal benefit, he added.
“So what that research means is that microwave technology is more efficient, better for the product and damages less of the product versus a conventional drying system,” Wilson said, noting that this is not comparing microwave technology to air drying.
Although nothing will ever replace the quality of a slow, air-dried product, Wilson said, not all products are meant to be craft goods.
In his example, industrial hemp wood and hempcrete use hemp — another term for cannabis that contains 0.3 percent or less THC content by dry weight — but find no value in the stock and stem of the plant. If thousands of pounds of the plant can be dried per hour using microwave technology, that means a major breakthrough in the industrial hemp market.
Advanced commercial farming techniques within the hemp industry will have a positive impact on the environment as well, added Rob, a partner in the business.
“Hemp fiber can be processed into several different products — and as a fiber, it’s stronger than cotton, it’s stronger than wood,” he said.
“Farmers can grow three crops of hemp a year, which would help [combat] deforestation,” Rob continued, explaining that the switch to hemp could save billions of dollars and natural resources. “… It takes 20 years to grow a tree and it takes 120-something days to grow a hemp plant.”
‘A wild ride’
A-10 and AMTEK’s next step is to work through a list of interested customers and start their builds — all of which are custom-made and take 90 to 120 days, Wilson said. The drying systems are most optimized for large-scale cultivators who own 100-plus acres, and the technology can cost anywhere between $50,000 to a few million dollars.
It’s exciting to see the venture with his father materialize, he said, and there’s more to come within the cannabis industry.
“That’s what excites me as an entrepreneur,” said Wilson, who also founded the hemp-based brand True State. “Hemp has given us an immensely great ability to pursue entrepreneurship. It’s been a wild ride, but what’s the fun in it if you’re not going to have a wild ride?”
Rob lets his son stay in the driver’s seat for those rides today, handing the day-to-day tasks of the business — and is proud to watch him do so, he said.
“It’s satisfying to work with your son,” Rob said. “He used to go all around the world with me doing microwave applications. Seeing him take an interest in this now that he’s older, it’s very satisfying.”
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Haunted by retro influences: How skull-popping artwork time traveled into some of the nation’s biggest publications
Step into the retro world of John F. Malta, a West Bottoms-based artist whose creative journey is a blend of nostalgia, punk aesthetics, and a passion for eye-catching storytelling. His vibrant imagination took Malta from his early days doodling in the classroom to his recent collaborations with iconic publications like The New York Times and…
PorchFestKC set to transform these Midtown neighborhoods into a one-day, walk-up music festival
After a three-year hiatus, the original PorchFestKC — a music festival Kathryn Golden likens to stumbling on a neighborhood block party and being allowed to stay — is returning. And it’ll play out with a digital upgrade this year, said Golden. Launched in 2015, PorchFestKC — the city’s trend-setting, porch-packed community music celebration — will…
Black Drip plans OctoberFest showcase to give KC a taste of overlooked small businesses
Black Drip Coffee’s OctoberFest is an extension of Charon Thompson’s passion for helping his fellow entrepreneurs, he shared. The free event — now in its third year — aims to bring together coffee enthusiasts, music lovers, and foodies in a vibrant atmosphere that showcases local small business owners. Festivities are set for 2 p.m. to…
Startup ambassadors’ pitch to former Kansas Citians: Move your innovation, hustle Back2KC
Kansas City is having a moment, said Liam Reilly, and it’s an opportunity he and fellow Back2KC organizers couldn’t pass up — reviving the tech talent recruitment program amid Chiefs glory, downtown baseball district buzz, KC Streetcar expansion, riverfront revitalization, and a World Cup on the horizon. “We didn’t want to wait another year to…





