This ‘DroneHunter’ Takes Down Other Drones By Using Kinetic Energy

DroneHunter is a drone that has been developed by Fortem Technologies and it is able to hunt down other drones.

DroneHunter is an AI-enabled, radar-guided drone that locks onto its target, fires a net, captures the threatening drone, and tows it to a safe deposit location. This process does not have any collateral damage as its process is kinetic and non-lethal.

Jim Housinger, vice-president of program management at Fortem Technologies stated that, after a series of evaluations with the U.S. Army, an operational assessment of DroneHunter’s system was ready and the software update between the two tests allowed the company to make some changes that the army had requested in order to tighten up our targeting algorithms and added that the latest test had a higher performance rate than the previous test.

DroneHunter has successfully defeated a range of rotary- and fixed-wing unmanned ‘Group 1′ aerial vehicles (UAV) which are small systems with a maximum weight of 20 lbs. (9.1 kg), during a recent U.S. Army test in Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona. 

DroneHunter is entirely integrated with the Army’s Forward Area Air Defense Command and Control (FAAD C2) system. It has performed completely autonomously from queuing through launch, intercept, and capture of the threat drones, depositing them in a safe designated drop zone, and landing.

DroneHunter successfully accepted command and engagement orders in the test. Using radar queuing from various radars in the Army’s Fixed Site Low, Slow, Small Unmanned Aircraft System Integrated Defeat System (FS-LIDS), DroneHunter successfully engaged and negated targets.

During the test, DroneHunter engaged with fixed-wing and rotary-wing targets of various speeds, size, altitude, and flight characteristics at operationally significant ranges with a High Probability of Kill (Pk). Fortem has partnered closely with the Army’s Integrated Fires/Rapid Capabilities Office for the past two years as part of their systems’ approach to counter-UAS. DroneHunter provides a significant enhancement to the overall counter-UAS solution.

‘They were creepy, really creepy. I don’t know how to describe it, but it’s almost as if they were watching us.’ Placido Montoya on the drones that he saw.

“This test is further proof that the Fortem DroneHunter is capable of defeating UAS threats in a rigorous operational environment,” stated VP of Program Management at Fortem Technologies James Housinger in a press release after the test.

 “With full integration into FAAD C2, operators can employ DroneHunter as a defensive weapon against a wide range of small UAS threats – threats which are one of the top concerns of U.S. Combatant Commanders in multiple areas of responsibility. The system’s 24/7 readiness for immediate employment day or night, or in restricted visibility without the need for a pilot, makes it an extremely effective tool against those threats,” he continued.

This drone is a marvelous addition to the autonomous novel drones models that are being introduced every now and then these days.

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