Drones and Unmanned Systems - Air, Sea, Land, Micro & Robot Systems

Source: Northrop Grumman


NORTHROP GRUMMAN UNVEILS PROJECT TALON CCA DRONE
Thursday, December 4, 2025

Source: Northrop Grumman


MOJAVE, Calif. -- Northrop Grumman, after losing its initial bid for the U.S. Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) increment one program, has developed a new prototype called Project Talon, aiming for a first flight within nine months. Built with Scaled Composites in about 15 months, Talon expands beyond the air-to-air focus of CCA’s first increment and is designed for multiple mission profiles.

The project reflects a shift in Northrop’s engineering approach, emphasizing affordability, rapid manufacturing, and simplified design rather than maximizing subsystem performance. By reducing parts by half, lowering weight by roughly 1,000 pounds, and rethinking materials, the company cut build time by a third and improved performance margins, including range and speed.

Talon’s unveiling follows Lockheed Martin’s Vectis design and broader momentum across the CCA program, with recent prototype flights from Anduril and General Atomics and growing international interest. The Air Force could invest nearly $1 billion in CCAs over the next several years.

 

Source: Royal Navy


LEONARDO’S AUTONOMOUS ‘PROTEUS’ COMPLETES FIRST GROUND RUNS FOR ROYAL NAVY
Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Source: Royal Navy


LONDON - Leonardo Helicopters has successfully completed the first ground runs of its Proteus technology demonstrator, a critical step toward fielding a high-capability unmanned aerial system for the UK Royal Navy (RN). Conducted at the company’s Yeovil site in Somerset, the tests evaluated the engine, systems, and rotor blades of the aircraft, which is derived from Leonardo’s AW09 light helicopter airframe.

This activity marks a significant advance in the £60 million ($79 million) program, which aims to validate the feasibility of a heavy, autonomous Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) platform. Designed to operate within a future "hybrid air wing" of crewed and uncrewed assets, the Proteus is engineered to relieve the strain on human aircrews by undertaking long-endurance missions.

The platform features a modular bay with a 1-tonne (2,200 lb) payload capacity, specifically targeted at anti-submarine warfare roles such as deploying and monitoring sonobuoys. According to the Royal Navy, the vehicle’s versatility could eventually extend to airborne surveillance, logistics resupply, and weapon delivery, allowing the service to monitor wider stretches of ocean without exhausting pilot resources.

With the ground runs complete, Leonardo is eyeing an aggressive timeline for the near future. Officials anticipate concluding "Phase 3A" activity, including the initial series of flight trials, before the end of the year.

 
A soldier prepares to fly a first-person-view (FPV) drone

A soldier prepares to fly a first-person-view (FPV) drone

Source: U.S. Army


PENTAGON WANTS 300,000+ LOW-COST ATTACK DRONES UNDER NEW DRONE DOMINANCE EFFORT
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
A soldier prepares to fly a first-person-view (FPV) drone

A soldier prepares to fly a first-person-view (FPV) drone

Source: U.S. Army


WASHINGTON - The Department of Defense has solicited industry support for a massive expansion in domestic unmanned aerial systems (UAS) production, aiming to field a new generation of low-cost, one-way attack drones. Known as the Drone Dominance Program (DDP), the initiative plans to issue $1 billion in fixed-price orders over the next two years to accelerate growth of the U.S. industrial base. The program is structured into four phases, each beginning with a "Gauntlet" challenge where military operators will test vendor systems against mission scenarios, such as 10-kilometer strikes in open territory.

Breaking from traditional cost-plus contracting, the DoD intends to utilize commercial procurement models where the government pays only for units delivered and accepted, with no progress payments for development risk. The first phase is slated to begin with a Gauntlet on February 16, 2026, targeting the purchase of 30,000 units at $5,000 each from up to 12 vendors. The second phase, beginning in August 2026, the DoD plans to procure 60,000 units from up to 10 vendors. Procurement will scale to 100,000 for the third phase, but the projected unit cost drops to $3,000 and the pool of potential vendors shrinks to seven. Officials aim to increase acquisition to 150,000 units in the final phase, which concludes in January 2028, while driving the unit price down to $2,300.

To participate, vendors must ensure their systems are compliant with the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and utilize secure supply chains. The DoD has requested industry feedback on manufacturing risks and timeline feasibility ahead of a formal Request for Solutions anticipated on December 17. Unlike typical competitions, this effort will not utilize a "down-select" process; vendors who fail to secure orders in earlier phases are encouraged to re-enter subsequent competitions.

 

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