Drones are superior – once they’re in the fitting place on the proper time.
However, rogue drones – piloted by hostile or negligent customers – can endanger lives when flying in unauthorized airspace. A main instance is the current collision of an errant drone with an Army UA60 helicopter over Staten Island.
British agency OpenWorks Engineering is gearing as much as struggle the War on Naughty Drones with the discharge of SkyWall300, a souped-up model of its sequence 100 UAV-mitigation know-how.
Skywall300 resembles a missile launcher and may deploy an clever projectile with on-board countermeasures similar to its predecessor, Skywall100, however with automated modes, elevated vary and enhanced autonomy.
The anti-drone answer consists of an air powered system that launches the identical vary of web seize projectiles used with the SkyWall100 handheld system. It integrates with exterior drone detection and command and management programs to permit for optimum ease of use. OpenWorks previewed Skywall300 on the current DSEI exhibition in London.
“The SkyWall concept is simple; physically capture a drone in a net and bring it to the ground safely under a parachute,” OpenWorks Sales and Marketing Director James Cross stated in a press launch. “Electronic warfare methods are proving difficult to regulate and approve for use and SkyWall offers a capable alternative.”
Last 12 months, OpenWorks helped defend President Barack Obama from potential drone threats throughout a state go to to Germany, deploying a number of SkyWall100 programs throughout Berlin.
In August 2016, the corporate gained the Best UAS Interdiction Award on the Countering Unauthorized Unmanned Aircraft Systems Challenge, stopping essentially the most drones out of seven finalists.
“We’ve incorporated all of the knowledge gained through working with the world’s leading government authorities and believe SkyWall300 has the ability to give these security operators the protection they need,” Cross added
“Authorities around the world have been looking for a system like this and we are proud to continue the tradition of British innovation in the security industry.”