“We selected the area of repurposing not based on fiscal requirements or because we were told go repurpose stuff, but we think it⦠is the right first disruptive move against opponents of the U.S.,” SCO Director Will Roper told a media roundtable.
Cheryl Pellerin writes Roper pointed to SCO’s efforts to build a miniature umanned aerial vehicle using three-dimensional printing technology, Pellerin reports.
The report said the Perdix micro-UAV is made of commercial components and designed to launch in balloons as well as to support military aircraft in high-threat environments.
Another SCO project focuses on using hypervelocity smart projectiles originally built for the U.S. military’s future electromagnetic railguns to develop a new defensive system.
The organization also seeks to build navigation technology with components that will be derived from smartphone cameras and commercial weapon systems such as small-diameter bombs.