Military

Anduril's new drones are nothing like DJI

View 4 Images
Demonstration only: In the first frame, the Bolt-M drone is diving for an attack before exploding, showering the unoccupied target vehicle with anti-materiel fodder
Anduril
The Bolt drone - no word on how fast it goes, but it looks fast
Anduril
Demonstration only: In the first frame, the Bolt-M drone is diving for an attack before exploding, showering the unoccupied target vehicle with anti-materiel fodder
Anduril
The Bolt-M drone as it dives in for attack, moments before exploding
Anduril
Demonstration only: The Bolt-M violently explodes, showering the unoccupied target vehicle with munition payloads designed in collaboration with Kraken Kinetics
Anduril
View gallery - 4 images

Anduril Industries has just announced the Bolt and Bolt-M drone. These aren't your average hobbyist drones either, as the M stands for "munitions," packing up to a 3 lb (1.4 kg) payload of your favorite tactical ordnance.

From the creator of the Oculus Rift, Palmer Luckey has gone all-in in the defense industry with a heavy focus on AI-driven technology, centralized around Anduril's Lattice AI platform.

"Lattice accelerates complex kill chains by orchestrating machine-to-machine tasks at scales and speeds beyond human capacity," is the catchline for the Lattice Command and Control feature, according to the Anduril website.

Demonstration only: The Bolt-M violently explodes, showering the unoccupied target vehicle with munition payloads designed in collaboration with Kraken Kinetics
Anduril

"Autonomous Hardware Meets Autonomy Software." Another tagline on Anduril's website. Is anyone else getting goosebumps?

Bolt and Bolt-M are another defensive/offensive tool that has been designed to work on the Lattice AI network of already existing tech Anduril has created: Swarm cruise missiles, underwater AI-driven drone submarines, Autonomous Air Vehicles (AAV) including unmanned fighter drones and drone helicopters.

Anduril even has a drone design that very much resembles the MQ-9 Reaper that can be launched out of a cannon while carrying warheads up to 33 lb (15 kg). Powered by Lattice.

The Bolt fits neatly in a backpack, weighs 12 lb (5.4 kg), and can be deployed in under five minutes from anywhere. Its primary purpose is ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance) and search and rescue. It can be flown manually but hosts a suite of autonomous features for tracking and stalking targets, even through occlusions.

The Bolt drone - no word on how fast it goes, but it looks fast
Anduril

It has a 45-minute flight time and a 12.4-mile (20 km) range.

Bolt maintains a steady connection with the Lattice AI which is continuously monitoring data from any and all available sources, not just other Anduril hardware.

The Bolt-M is a near-identical machine, however with its modular design, it is compatible with warhead or munitions payloads up to 3 lb, and operators can easily swap between choices like anti-personnel or anti-materiel (for disabling vehicles and armor) warheads.

The drone operator is presented with four simple decisions: where to look, what to follow, how to engage, and when to strike. A touchscreen controller allows the human operator to make these choices.

Once a target has been selected, the human operator can set parameters for the angle of attack while the onboard vision and guidance algorithms handle the rest, even if the drone is no longer in contact with the operator.

With its additional weight, the Bolt-M has a 40-minute flight time with the same 12.4-mile range and both versions feature toolless swappable batteries for extended flights.

Source: Anduril

View gallery - 4 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
7 comments
CAVUMark
Self destruction, great way to increase sales.
Marco McClean
Great, another bloody nightmare. Another coward's weapon. Another revenue stream for industrial gangsters and conspirators to remote-control real-life-video-game personal-consequence-free murder. Your tax dollars at work.
Nelson
It is so encouraging to know humanity is always working diligently on new and innovative ways for us to kill our fellow man or women and child depending on target.
quax
We can bemoan and philosophize all day long about the slippery slope of AI used for autonomous killing machines. But the fact of the matter is that real war is driving this development. And a nation fighting for its survival like for instance Ukraine will take any advantage that they can get.
aksdad
Could they produce one loaded with pepper spray or skunk spray to chase off deer and squirrels that eat my roses and vegetables? Or dogs that leave their fecal gifts in my yard? Or their obnoxious owners who don't clean up after them? That would promote world peace.
Captain Danger
Cool but the target was not moving and it didn't look like it even took out the windshield.
Needs more power.
And I like @Aksdad's suggestion of a civilian model but it would probably be hard to get it licensed.
ReservoirPup
NG, LM, Boeing, etc should have been doing this en masse a while ago. This already works in Ukraine, tnx to Anduril too. The naysayers would opt for the cannon fodder approach, but I invite them to take part in that themselves or try to change the minds of blood-thirsty despots first. Anduril is on the right track!