På Farnborough i 2010 så jeg anti-dronevåpen for første gang. Det var militært utstyr som var ganske stort og tungt; LiteEye ble det kalt som kom alt i år 2000. I dag kan en få anti-drone utstyr for sivilt bruk, noe jeg mener Gatwick har. De bør være tilgjengelig på olje- og gassinstallasjoner til havs- og til lands. (Red.)
DroneShield Gets 1.8M US Department of Defense Contract
DroneShield has received an $1.8 million contract for its DroneGun MKIII handheld counter-drone system from the United States Department
of Defense (DoD).
Delivery will be completed this month, with full
payment due to be received in the current quarter.
This follows a previous down selection of DroneGun
MKIII for evaluation by the DoD’s Joint Counter-small Unmanned Aircraft Systems
Office (JCO).
“It’s an honor to provide our DoD customers with
advanced cUAS solutions to help address complex security requirements,” said
Tom Branstetter, DroneShield’s Virginia-based Director of Business Development.
“DroneShield is committed to delivering critical Force Protection technology
that enables security personnel to rapidly respond to this growing threat,”
Branstetter added.
Matt McCrann, U.S. CEO of DroneShield added, “As
the threat of UAS continues to seemingly adapt in real-time, countermeasures
need to be both effective and flexible.”
“DroneGun MKIII is that lightweight, flexible
countermeasure that can go anywhere and serve as the ideal gap fill capability
to protect personnel and assets wherever they might need to operate. We look
forward to continuing to support our DoD end users wherever, whenever needed.”
DroneGun MKIII
This contract is the largest US sale by
DroneShield to date, and follows several recently announced contracts by
DroneShield, including the $2 million European sale of DroneSentry fixed site systems and the initial US airport deployment.
The Company is also progressing active discussions
on sales to Ukraine, following the initial deployment at the start of the war
earlier this year.
Source: Press Release
US Army to Buy Computerized Rifle Sights to Down Drones
The U.S. Army has purchased SMASH 2000L computerized optical sight systems
manufactured by the Israeli defense firm Smart
Shooter. The
company is highlighting the system’s counter-drone role, and both the Army and the U.S. Marine Corps have already acquired a limited number of
older SMASH 2000 variants for this very purpose.
SMASH 2000L sights, with the ‘L’ standing for
‘light’, are designed for use on a variety of small arms to facilitate more
accurate target engagement — basically shooting things with computer-aided
precision. While the line’s newest addition is similar to its SMASH 2000
predecessor, Smart Shooter’s product literature for the earlier variant doesn’t officially
detail its counter-small unmanned aerial systems (C-sUAS) role despite the company having
frequently tested SMASH 2000 in these scenarios and the high interest in such a
function by the marketplace.
It is also important to note that Smart Shooter is
marketing its newest sight to non-U.S. military customers as the SMASH 3000, so
it will be referred to it as SMASH 2000L/3000 from here on out to avoid confusion.
SMASH 2000L:3000 sight fitted to a rifle
In a press release, Smart Shooter explained that
the company was awarded the contract from Atlantic Diving Supply, a U.S.-based
contractor that provides military equipment to federal agencies, who then
subcontracted with Smart Shooter to supply the Army with an undisclosed number
of the SMASH 2000L/3000 sights. The contract’s dollar value was not divulged.
The announcement stated that the systems would be
deployed specifically as part of the Army’s counter-small unmanned aerial
systems (C-sUAS)
defense strategy, which Smart Shooter had been testing with the Marine Corps
using SMASH 2000 sights since last year. When SMASH first appeared with U.S. special operations units in Syria
in June 2020, what looked to be similar evaluations of the earlier system were
also being conducted.
In a number of photos taken during the tests, special operators at
the At Tanf
garrison in southern Syria could be seen using SMASH 2000 to fire at decoy targets hanging
below commercial drones to evaluate the system’s sUAS targeting ability. While
there is no official confirmation that this demonstration meant SMASH 2000 had
been officially acquired by U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM), doing
so, namely in the Middle East where the threat from drones has
escalated dramatically with
At Tanf coming under drone attack many times over the years, would make sense.
U.S. SOCOM has also hired Smart Shooter to develop
a separate computerized small arms sighting system called the Individual Weapon
Overmatch Optic, which The War Zone covered in detail here. Smart Shooter has even secured a contract with
the U.S. Navy to see how a SMASH system optimized for C-sUAS operations would
fare in a maritime environment, as drones have begun affecting
this domain all
the same.
Smart Shooter’s new SMASH 2000L/3000 fitted to a rifle
“We are
honored that the U.S. Army continues to value our true fire control systems,
and once again selects the SMASH technology for the use of its soldiers,” said
Smart Shooter CEO Michal Mor in the press release. “Whether mounted on a rifle
or remotely
controlled, the unique
SMASH technology ensures precise target elimination by guaranteeing that shot
accuracy will not be affected by human errors such as fatigue and stress, nor
by the target movement.”
“[SMASH 2000L/3000] is Smart Shooter’s lightest
handheld operated fire control system,” read the company press release. “Using
[artificial intelligence], computer vision, and advanced algorithms, [SMASH
2000L/3000] maximizes force lethality, operational effectiveness, and
situational awareness throughout every engagement, in both day and night.
Operationally proven, [SMASH 2000L/3000] ensures precise target elimination
against ground and aerial targets, making it an ideal hard-kill solution
against drones and sUAS.”
Its rechargeable smart lithium-ion battery pack
allows SMASH 2000L/3000 up to 72 hours of use, or what the company says equals
out to about 3,600 SMASH-assisted shots. While Smart Shooter claims that the
system can be fitted to most weapons, SMASH 2000L/3000’s datasheet on the company website only lists the M4, AR15, and SR25 (M110) as its supported weapons.
Using a see-through optics sight similar to a video camera, SMASH 2000L/3000
will detect possible targets, the user can “lock onto” the one of interest, and
the system then computes the appropriate point of aim. Once locked in, SMASH
2000L/3000 can also maintain tracking of the target’s movements before a shot
is taken, ostensibly even in crowded areas, which would be especially helpful in
scenarios where target discrimination would be a challenge.
According to Smart Shooter, when operating in what
the company calls ‘Drone Mode’, SMASH 2000L/3000 can recognize sUAS targets,
automatically track their flight paths, provide aiming cues, and thereby allow
the operator to more accurately engage what could otherwise be a very difficult target to take out.
When firing on an sUAS, Smart Shooter claims that
SMASH 2000L/3000 has an engagement range of up to about 656 feet (200 meters)
in daytime conditions, which is a figure that can’t be compared to its
predecessor as Smart Shooter only provided SMASH 2000’s range against ground targets.
With that, both SMASH 2000 and SMASH 2000L/3000 can engage static and dynamic
ground targets from up to approximately 984 feet (300 meters) away also during
the day.
The company hasn’t revealed SMASH
2000L/3000’s nighttime performance specifications, and it wasn’t clear if the
range provided was max or optimal.
The system also boasts connectivity with command,
control, communications, computers, and intelligence (C4I) systems and external
sensors. Smart Shooter has said that these networking capabilities would also
allow the video feed taken from the system to be piped elsewhere, for both
training and operational purposes. Important information could be projected
into its viewfinder for soldiers to utilize, similar to an augmented reality
fashion, as well. These networking abilities would mean that the SMASH
2000L/3000, just like its predecessor, could offer a secondary reconnaissance and
surveillance capability, too.
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