US Army Awards Contracts to Rheinmetall, HDT to Build Cargo Robot Prototypes

Detroit: The US Army has picked American Rheinmetall Vehicles and HDT Expeditionary Systems to build prototypes of equipment-carrying robots, the service announced.

Several companies were competing to build the second increment of the service’s Small Multipurpose Equipment Transport (S-MET), robot, including General Dynamics Land Systems, an Anduril and Hanwha team, and Teledyne FLIR.

ads

GDLS won the first contracts in 2019 and 2020 to build the first increment of the vehicle.

Under the newest contract, American Rheinmetall and HDT will each build eight prototypes for a combined total of $22 million, the service said in a statement.

“S-MET Increment II addresses capability gaps associated with excessive physical burdens, recharging batteries during continuous operations, and reducing sustainment burden for semi-independent operations,” Kyle Bruner, the Army’s project manager for force projection within the Program Executive Office Combat Support & Combat Service Support, said in the statement.

Using the robot also “reduces Soldier load and enhances small unit combat effectiveness by reducing fatigue and injury caused by excessive physical loads, shifting the burden to the robotic platform,” he added.

big bang

The first increment of S-MET is a radio-controlled, eight-wheeled platform that can carry various payloads and generate power for electronic systems. While the first increment is capable of carrying 1,000 lbs, the Army’s goal for the second increment is to double the weight the robot can carry, the service said.

Additionally, the second increment should have higher exportable power to handle unmanned aircraft systems, run more quietly and have a dismounted wireless mesh communication network integrated into the system.

huges

The system is also required to be modular and open in order to upgrade it easily and cost-effectively, the Army stated.

The service plans to award a production contract for S-MET Increment II following the prototyping phase and developmental testing in late fiscal year 2027. The service’s current plan is to buy up to 2,195 systems.

The Army is pursuing a different robotic combat vehicle for heavy maneuver forces, but the S-MET vehicle could be the more common robot of choice for lighter formations, the Army’s Program Executive Officer for Ground Combat Systems, Maj Gen Glenn Dean, said  in late 2023.

“S-MET is a very capable, small platform, and we’re seeing a lot of value with experimentation,” Dean said.

raksha-anirveda-icon

Raksha Anirveda's editorial desk team brings in the collective experience of creative professionals - a fine mix of senior copy editors, writers, proofreaders and designers. Working as a team, they continuously create, manage, and curate content to sustain the magazine's profile and reputation in line with market trends and achieve magazine's goal.

More like this

Israel Delivers BARAK MX Air-Defence System to Slovakia

Tel Aviv: Under the Euro 560 million agreement signed...

Persian Gulf: China’s PLAN Conducts Several Deployments to Safeguard Oil Imports and Intelligence Gathering

Tel Aviv: China’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) has conducted...

Airbus Delivers First A321XLR for Air Canada

Hamburg, Germany. The first of 30 Airbus A321XLRs for Canada’s flag...

SkyDrive and NEXCO West Sign Partnership Agreement on Advanced Air Mobility

Toyota, Japan. SkyDrive Inc., a leading eVTOL aircraft manufacturer based...

Elbit Systems Receives Multi-year Orders Exceeding $200 Million for Aerial Munitions from IMOD

Tel Aviv: As part of bolstering readiness for near-term...

India Should Act Proactively in Space Sector: CDS Gen Chauhan

Amid rising geopolitical tensions and the increasing centrality of...

Unimech Aerospace to Acquire Majority Stake in Hobel Bellows for ₹450 Crore

Unimech Aerospace and Manufacturing Ltd is set to acquire...
Indian Navy Special Edition 2025spot_img