U.S. defense contractor Raytheon announced a successful test of the DeepStrike autonomous mobile launcher vehicle this week.
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Interesting Engineering on MSNRaytheon’s ‘DeepStrike’ autonomous launcher shines at US Army’s PC-C5 initiativeThe aerospace leader now plans to take feedback from the PC-C5 event and continue launcher development and testing.
The following is the March 27, 2025, Congressional Research Service In Focus report, The U.S. Army’s Typhon Strategic ...
Experts say President Donald Trump's "Golden Dome" will need space-based radars, missile interceptors and laser weapons ...
European capitals are reviewing vulnerabilities and want to wean themselves from dependence on American weapons, but ...
With the war in Ukraine not slowing down, the Army is rushing to put anti-GPS jammers in its artillery systems. Here's ...
Raytheon, an RTX (NYSE: RTX) business, fired a new version of the company's combat-proven Coyote® family of products from a helicopter during a recent test at Nine Mile Training Center, giving ...
The EU is launching a €150 billion ($163 billion) loan programme for defence projects, favouring products manufactured within ...
The Ukraine war and increased European defence spending are likely to slow Australia's plans to develop its own missile ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNUS’ next death ray laser could be deadlier on battleground, fry enemy drones fasterThe U.S. Army is expected to soon get a new type of high-energy weapon that could potentially fry enemy drones. HII, a ...
Raytheon, an RTX (NYSE: RTX) business, announced its DeepStrike™ autonomous mobile launcher vehicle, which does not require a driver, successfully completed a live fire demonstration at the U.S.
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