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Home Front: Tech |
Robots hit battlefield Earth |
2005-01-25 |
![]() But officials are quick to point out that these are not the autonomous killer robots of science fiction. A SWORDS robot shoots only when its human operator presses a button after identifying a target on video shot by the robot's cameras. "The only difference is that his weapon is not at his shoulder, it's up to half a mile a way," Foster-Miller Inc general manager of Talon robots Bob Quinn said. As one marine fresh out of boot camp said after seeing the robot: "This is my invisibility cloak." Mr Quinn said it was a "bootstrap development process" to convert a Talon robot, which has been in military service since 2000, from its main mission defusing roadside bombs in Iraq into the gunslinging SWORDS. It was a joint development process between the army and Foster-Miller. Working with soldiers and engineers at Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey, it took just six months and only about $US2 million ($2.6 million) in development money to outfit a Talon with weapons, according to Mr Quinn and Picatinny technology manager Anthony Sebasto. The Talon had already proven itself to be pretty rugged. One was blown from the roof of a Humvee and into a nearby river by a roadside bomb in Iraq. Soldiers simply opened its shrapnel-pocked control unit and drove the robot out of the river, Mr Quinn said. Its developers say its tracks, like those on a tank, can overcome rock piles and barbed wire, though it needs a ride to travel faster than 7km/h. Running on lithium ion batteries, it can operate for one to four hours at a time, depending on the mission. Operators work the robot using a control unit which has two joysticks, a handful of buttons and a video screen. Mr Quinn says that may eventually be replaced by a "Game Boy" type of controller hooked up to virtual reality goggles. The army has been testing it over the past year at Picatinny and the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland to ensure it won't malfunction and can stand up to radio jammers and other countermeasures. |
Posted by:God Save The World |
#23 "They can be boxed up and warehoused between wars. " This is what the Congress has tried to do with us human Soldiers after every war... "wars over, lets cut the budget and dump the GI's" |
Posted by: OldSpook 2005-01-25 4:44:31 PM |
#22 "They can be boxed up and warehoused between wars. " This is what the Congress has tried to do with us human Soldiers after every war... "wars over, lets cut the budget and dump the GI's" |
Posted by: OldSpook 2005-01-25 4:44:31 PM |
#21 My 9 year old son wants one, Remoteman. Just mount a BB gun on top for now. We can change the hardware on the platform as he grows and matures. All kidding aside, great work! |
Posted by: Alaska Paul 2005-01-25 11:53:41 PM |
#20 Bad things are always increasing, mounting, escalating, rising or soaring, and they're usually doing so amid or despite something good. |
Posted by: Matt 2005-01-25 10:36:02 PM |
#19 "Does the number of casualties ever go down?" FLASH: Robots Hit The Copyedit Room |
Posted by: lex 2005-01-25 9:41:49 PM |
#18 TA: They are rather quiet since they are electric. RC: They deal with steps pretty well from what I've seen. Cingold, much appreciated. I know that I would not want to see one of these coming down an alley my way. |
Posted by: Remoteman 2005-01-25 9:33:20 PM |
#17 How quiet are they? |
Posted by: TomAnon 2005-01-25 9:23:21 PM |
#16 Remoteman, Thanks for what you're doing -- putting a bit of the fear of God into our adversaries. Please pass on our best regards and deepest gratitude to your buddies. |
Posted by: cingold 2005-01-25 7:58:53 PM |
#15 How well do they deal with steps? Better than Daleks, I'm sure. But how well do these deal with bocked sinks? |
Posted by: Bulldog 2005-01-25 7:03:03 PM |
#14 "Exterminate! Exterminate!" Hmmm.... How well do they deal with steps? |
Posted by: Robert Crawford 2005-01-25 6:56:18 PM |
#13 But when do the GUNDAM battle mech suits arrive? |
Posted by: borgboy 2005-01-25 6:48:30 PM |
#12 Remote kontrolled veapons vere a German specialty in my day! |
Posted by: Generaloberst Heinz Gunther Wilhelm Guderian 2005-01-25 6:32:46 PM |
#11 Does the number of casualties ever go down? Well, if there's a necromancer involved. But not in the real world. |
Posted by: Robert Crawford 2005-01-25 5:46:51 PM |
#10 "WITH American military casualties climbing...." Whenever I read things like this, I find it rather difficult to keep myself reading further. Does the number of casualties ever go down? Lazy writers and obvious spin. |
Posted by: Mark E. 2005-01-25 5:39:47 PM |
#9 No Disassemble! |
Posted by: Johnny 5 2005-01-25 5:00:10 PM |
#8 "They can be boxed up and warehoused between wars. " This is what the Congress has tried to do with us human Soldiers after every war... "wars over, lets cut the budget and dump the GI's" |
Posted by: OldSpook 2005-01-25 4:44:31 PM |
#7 Works on a standard tripod or on top of vehicles too. We even have units in housings for permanent fafcility security. Easy to operate and super accurate. I love my job. |
Posted by: Remoteman 2005-01-25 4:38:30 PM |
#6 "Warning Lt. Robinson! Warning!" |
Posted by: Rex Mundi 2005-01-25 4:36:42 PM |
#5 Very nice li'l 'bot brigade we've got there... |
Posted by: Seafarious 2005-01-25 4:29:43 PM |
#4 R-man: Lovely work there. |
Posted by: Mike 2005-01-25 4:29:42 PM |
#3 The reason that it only took a few months to put the weapon payload onto the TALON is because my company already had that system (the one in the middle...the other two demo only). With the M-240 on the SWORDS, it is one bad piece of kit. Now you understand my handle. |
Posted by: Remoteman 2005-01-25 4:25:24 PM |
#2 "Exterminate! Exterminate!" |
Posted by: Mike 2005-01-25 4:22:13 PM |
#1 Input, input! |
Posted by: #5 2005-01-25 4:20:33 PM |