Logos Technologies successfully tests WAMI sensor on RQ-21A Blackjack

Logos Technologies successfully tests WAMI sensor on RQ-21A Blackjack
Logos Technologies picture.
Logos Technologies LLC announced today that it successfully flew its wide-area motion imagery (WAMI) sensor aboard an RQ-21A Blackjack unmanned aircraft at a test range in Boardman, Oregon.
Share
Cardcounter system offers unprecedented wide-area motion imagery capability to U.S. Navy and Marine small, tactical unmanned aircraft

Logos Technologies press release

The two-week-long testโ€”which included preparatory groundwork in Bingen, Washingtonโ€”comes on the heels of a $5.3 million contract the U.S. Naval Air Systems Command had recently awarded to Logos, to develop more WAMI sensors for Navy and Marine users.

โ€œWe are very excited by our recent test aboard the RQ-21A Blackjack,โ€ said Doug Rombough, VP for Business Development at Logos Technologies. โ€œOur ongoing effort to develop an ultra-light WAMI capability for the Blackjack and other small, tactical unmanned aircraft is clearly paying off.โ€

Logos has created a U.S. military version of BlackKite, currently called Cardcounter, an ultra-light (26 pounds) infrared WAMI system developed by Logos. Despite its low SWaP, BlackKite can detect and track in real time every significant target moving within a city-sized area, giving tactical operators a powerful, hereto unheard of, capability.

In addition, thanks to the WAMI systemโ€™s multi-modal edge processorโ€”which can store six or more hours of mission dataโ€”users on the ground can also access recorded imagery for on-the-fly forensic analysis.

โ€œNo military in the world has anything like the Logos WAMI sensor on their tactical unmanned aircraft,โ€ said Rombough. โ€œThis WAMI system views and records the entire area and can stream multiple real-time and recorded video โ€˜chip-outsโ€™ down to handheld devices.โ€

Logos was first tasked with converting their BlackKite system to meet government requirements in September 2019, with two units being produced for the U.S. Naval Air Systems Command. The follow-on $5.3 million development contract and March test flight are part of the same effort. โ€œIn total, we will be producing four modular WAMI systems for the Navy,โ€ said Doug Rombough, VP for Business Development at Logos Technologies, โ€œwith the hope that this will open the door for a wider U.S. military adoption of WAMI, both for the Blackjack and other Group 3 unmanned aircraft.โ€

Tags

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement