Hensoldt's Collision Warning System for Drones Ready for Tak
Stay informed with our
free newsletters

Hensoldt's Collision Warning System for Drones Ready for Take-off

Flight tests to demonstrate basic system for autonomous flying

Sensor solutions provider HENSOLDT is vigorously pushing ahead with the development of a collision warning system for civil and military drones: after the radar sensor as the core element of a collision warning system was already successfully tested in flight as part of the ProSA-n (military) and KoKo2 (civil) study programmes, work on the software required for interaction with an autopilot is well advanced. As early as this summer, a demonstrator of the collision warning system is to prove in flight tests that the sensor performance and the software-supported avoidance logic correspond correctly with the autopilot.

"We have progressed faster than expected with our 'Detect & Avoid' radar," says Erwin Paulus, head of HENSOLDT's radar division. "In the meantime, the complete functional chain from detection and classification to the initiation of avoidance manoeuvres is working so reliably that we are sure we will be able to demonstrate a basic system for autonomous flying in the summer."

Since the beginning of the year, HENSOLDT has also been involved in the EUDAAS (= European Detect and Avoid System) programme, in which several European companies are developing a concept for bringing large military medium altitude/long endurance (MALE) drones, such as the Eurodrone recently released by the German parliament, into European airspace.

MALE and HALE UAV's - Market and Technology Forecast to 2031

MALE and HALE UAV's - Market and Technology Forecast to 2031

Market forecasts by Region, Application, Endurance, Type, and System. Country Analysis, Market and Technology Overview, Opportunities and Impact Analysis, and Leading Company Profiles

Download free sample pages More information

HENSOLDT's "detect-and-avoid" radar uses the latest Active Electronically Scanning Array (AESA) technology, which allows multiple detection tasks to be performed simultaneously and enables very rapid target detection. The scalable radar can be used in large military drones as well as on board smaller civilian drones.


Publishdate:
May 28, 2021

Directed Energy Symposium 2025

Directed Energy Symposium 2025

National Harbor, MD
Sep 17 - 18, 2025

View agenda