Defense contractor Epirus this week demonstrated its drone-frying Leonidas to observers from various U.S. military services and foreign countries, including some in the Indo-Pacific. In the climax of the two-hour show, Leonidas went up against 49 quadcopters, among the largest grouping it’s ever faced. The „forcefield system,“ which weaponizes electromagnetic interference, crippled all of them at once. No pricey projectiles. No fireballs.
ouath on
Basically a big directional pulsed microwave oven, can also heat your meals between two missions, tea for the UK
rypher on
Until simple Faraday cage, like 5 cents worth of aluminum foil wrapped around the drone body, defeat the billion dollar system.
WhyDoIEvenBotheridk on
What would happen if it was used in the middle of a city as opposed to an open field?
LemmeLaroo on
Would it work against a fiberoptic FPV drone? That seems to be the norm in drone warfare now.
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Defense contractor Epirus this week demonstrated its drone-frying Leonidas to observers from various U.S. military services and foreign countries, including some in the Indo-Pacific. In the climax of the two-hour show, Leonidas went up against 49 quadcopters, among the largest grouping it’s ever faced. The „forcefield system,“ which weaponizes electromagnetic interference, crippled all of them at once. No pricey projectiles. No fireballs.
Basically a big directional pulsed microwave oven, can also heat your meals between two missions, tea for the UK
Until simple Faraday cage, like 5 cents worth of aluminum foil wrapped around the drone body, defeat the billion dollar system.
What would happen if it was used in the middle of a city as opposed to an open field?
Would it work against a fiberoptic FPV drone? That seems to be the norm in drone warfare now.