The Warriors Nook at AUSA 2022. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
AUSA 2022 — The third and last day of the Affiliation of the US Military convention has come and gone, and now the assembly prepares for the house stretch. The Breaking Protection group had full protection of the day’s information, from particular operations to Undertaking Convergence, so catch up right here.
Over at Rheinmetall’s sales space sat the hefty Lynx OMFV (Optionally Manned Combating Car). The corporate, as its opponents, is hoping to make a robust impression because the Military appears for OMFV proposals later this fall — the early stage of an virtually definitely profitable long-term contract award. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
AUSA was effectively attended by worldwide officers and officers as effectively, and by international protection corporations. The Korean sales space, proven right here, featured some merchandise hoping to make a splash within the US army. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
All the way in which from down underneath, the Australian agency Defendtex offered a few of its modular UAVs. Right here guests can see the Drone155, which the corporate says might be outfitted with ISR payloads or explosives. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
The MVPP from Globe Tech stands for Modular Car Safety Platform, a car add-on that may take the brunt of improvised explosive gadget detonations. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
Not your conventional protection contractor, the computing big IBM has a sales space at AUSA displaying off its flashy however purposeful quantum pc. The US authorities as a complete, and the Pentagon particularly, are closely invested within the quantum computing race with the likes of China. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
Among the many fleet of automobiles parked all through the AUSA flooring for show was the Flyer 72-U, made by Normal Dynamics. The corporate says the car takes a “modular strategy” so it may be configured for something from “mild strike assault” to rescue and evacuation. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
The stuff of counter-UAS nightmares, the Virginia-based BlueHalo agency makes drone swarms that use AI and machine studying to offer battlefield intelligence to troopers. The Military’s Speedy Capabilities and Essential Applied sciences Workplace awarded the corporate $14 million in February to develop the HIVE. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).
It’s a .50 caliber Gatling gun, one which Dillon Aero says can hearth 1,500 pictures per minute, or 25 rounds per second. (Breaking Protection/Brendon Smith).