Jointly organised by the US Army DEVCOM, ARCENT, and the Royal Saudi Air Forces, Red Sands 24.2 provided a test-bed for the latest technological solutions to deal with the rising threat of UAS attacks. As an active participant in Red Sands over multiple years, MARSS took a leading role in this year’s exercise, demonstrating its end-to-end, detection to defeat, C2 systems - fully integrated with EOS’ remote weapon station.
Over the course of the exercise, MARSS’ AI-powered NiDAR platform was tested against numerous simulated drone attacks, including both Category 2 rotary-wing, and Category 3 fixed-wing UAS - breaking new ground by defeating multiple military-grade drones.
This performance was made possible by NiDAR’s inbuilt threat prioritisation, which autonomously analyses radar tracks and EO/IR data to assess and order the potential risks - as well as providing the operator with a recommended course of action. Overseen by a human in the loop, NiDAR then relayed detailed slew-to-cue data to EOS’ integrated remote weapon station to defeat the identified threat at exceptional speed.
Josh Harman, Vice President of Business Development with MARSS, commented, “In Ukraine and across the Middle East the defence industry and users are identifying major shortfalls with deployed integrated and non-integrated air defence systems. With constantly evolving threats, the time for sensors, effectors and integrated capabilities to react, adjust and deploy is ever shortening, and some existing systems are struggling to keep up.
“Over the course of the Red Sands exercise, MARSS demonstrated multi-sensor integration on a single UI that was mature and devastatingly effective against the various air threats - reducing the decision cycle of ‘detect to defeat’ to a matter of seconds.”
Another of the distinguishing features of MARSS’ participation in Red Sands was its fully wireless C2 functionality. Enabled by its partnership with Silvus Technologies, MARSS was able to integrate multiple sensors, including radars from Echodyne and SRC, and EO/IR sensors from Current Corp, to provide a unified tactical picture on a single display.
Harman added, “Exercises, such as Red Sands, are critical for understanding the needs and pressure points for our customer-base. With so many drones being deployed daily, or even hourly, in active areas, it’s imperative that any CUAS system can target the drones, but also the operators.
“MARSS’ NiDAR is able to do just that - enabling our customers to protect the public from the immediate threat, and future threats as well. It is capabilities such as these, combined with our ability to detect-and-defeat everything up to Cat 3 drone, that make MARSS’ systems so valued by our customers.”
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