POCASSET, Mass. -- Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) announced the delivery of the first REMUS 130 unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), the newest variant in its widespread REMUS UUV family. The UUV has reportedly been handed over to a U.S. ally and planned client. The REMUS 130 will succeed the REMUS 100 series and is designed to provide greater modularity, interoperability, and payload flexibility.
The two-person-portable UUV is capable of operating at depths of up to 100 m and offers up to 10 hours of endurance, supported by field-swappable batteries to improve mission availability. Built on the same technology architecture as the larger REMUS 300 and REMUS 620 platforms, the system incorporates HII’s Odyssey Autonomous Control System, advanced navigation and communications capabilities, and open-architecture interfaces that allow for the integration of commercial, government, and customer-specific payloads.
According to HII, the REMUS 130 is intended to support a range of missions, including mine countermeasures, search and rescue, seabed mapping, environmental monitoring, oceanographic research, and offshore infrastructure inspection. The delivery expands HII’s autonomous maritime systems portfolio, which now includes more than 750 REMUS vehicles delivered worldwide. REMUS systems are currently operated by 14 NATO navies and users in more than 30 countries.