Army's Airborne Sniper System -- .338 Lapua

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Pretty impressive setup, but I'm sure that there will still be a need for snipers on the ground, too... :)

Washington, April 23 (ANI): The US Army is testing the Autonomous Rotorcraft Sniper System (ARSS) - a remote-controlled unmanned vigilante robot helicopter equipped with a high-velocity sniper rifle.

According to a report by Fox News, its RND Edge semi-automatic gun is mounted on a self-stabilizing turret with built-in zoom camera, and fires 7 to 10 precisely aimed .338-caliber rounds per second.

Back on the ground, a human directs it using a modified Xbox 360 controller, which plugs into a laptop so that the operator can see what the drone sees.

The system is intended for the urban battlefield - an eye in the sky that can stare down concrete canyons, and blink out targets with extreme precision.

Attempting to return fire against the ARSS is liable to be a near-suicidal act, as ARSS is described as being able to fire seven to 10 aimed shots per minute, and it’s unlikely to miss.

Because the Vigilante is smaller, lighter and cheaper than a manned combat helicopter, it can be supplied in greater numbers, and without the need for those elite, highly-trained snipers.

Sniping from a chopper currently takes tons of skill and training, but ARSS is literally point-and-shoot for the operator on the ground, using a videogame-type controller.

The software makes all the necessary corrections, and the system should ensure first-round kills at several hundred yards.

The secret is in the control system and stabilized turret, which is currently fitted with a powerful RND Manufacturing Edge 2000 rifle specifically designed for sniping work, using the heavyweight .338 Lapua Magnum cartridge.

“Having the ability to accurately engage single point man sized targets with an airborne UAV will give the ground based soldier the ability to have a high-point survivable sniper at their disposal when needed,” stated the Army solicitation notice when the project was announced in 2005. (ANI)
 
The army is always testing all kinds of stuff. There's a LONG path between 'testing' something and seeing the army actually put it in service. For all the detail in this article, 'testing' might not mean anything more than the inventor persuaded the army to send a guy out to watch him demonstrate it.
 
Well, it's cheaper than a Hellfire missile and causes less collateral damage I suppose.

My question is why develop a specialized automatic .338 Lapua rifle when there are already .50 BMGs available that can be modified?
 
The 338 Lapua was a "standard" RND 2K; it was not specially designed for the ARSS. What was specially modified was the fire control system and stabilization (which would have been needed for the 50 BMG, too). The .338 is preferred over the .50 for the FC stabilization in flight. The .50 kicks too hard on such a small craft to make follow-up shots successful. The .338 is powerful enough to get the job done and is more controllable in flight.
 
xbox 360 controller, ...interesting. Reminds me of my game crazy cousin who's really good at Halo3 games. Maybe he should apply to be the test "operator".
 
That thing is a joke. Give a 416 to a trained guy with a pulse and the robot will be shrap metal.
 
That thing is a joke. Give a 416 to a trained guy with a pulse and the robot will be shrap metal.
The idea is to send it in to clear areas where the trained guy wouldn't retain his pulse for very long.
 
Hi all of you!
I am so glad that so many had exactly the same image in mind...probably black and white with Brad Fidel music playing and a team in a crew-served on a truck zipping around! I've been waiting for something like that to come around. Even if that product is only a blue-sky demo, with RPVs turning into UAVs and then civilian technology giving us mini (or micro) UAVs etc, it's not hard to predict. If you guys start looking at how much urban control structure and cameras are being incorporated, it's just linear extrapolation, right? Add that to papers on 4th/5th gen warfare and its effects on personal freedom and economy, you have a chilling 15 min glimpse into the future. With GPS in our cell phones, I guess I'm not expecting to see RPVs over our skies quite yet, but I can just see what airborne C3I will look like when (not if) our next riot happens (I'm in the LA,CA area). I don't know if you've seen the same thing, but in my town (a very up-mkt place) and another like it. Police now have M-16/AR-15/M4s next to their 870s! The other town have em next to their Benellis (lotsa $$s that town). After N. Hollywood (my belief: copycat of Heat) I have footage of sherriffs practicing shooting from a chopper w/ a semi-auto shotgun (looked like m1s90). Woof, things will be exciting if they start clearing places after a disaster like in New Orleans!

oh p.s. dedicated game machines are some of the fastest hardware around. Sony's playstation 3 is being networked, in one instance to produce avg over time of 5 petaflops (petaflops being the spoor you track while hunting Petas, nyuk, snort)

Best regards!
 
well, i dont know why you guys are being skeptical or nervous. I, for one, welcome our new metal overlords and look forward to the rise of the machines
 
Wow, I was just thinking about this today. While I'm no expert in control systems engineering by far (I actually quite suck at it), I was wondering if the same concept of tracking - be it an unmanned camera tracking the player at a football game, or a missle tracking an enemy aircraft - would ever be implemented into a sniper rifle. I assumed the technology was out there, and now I know for sure.

Now, only if they could attach a few MP5's, a PSG-1, and some Glocks to it, then the Rapid Tactical Force might consider using it for "retail shopping security".

:D
 
Great idea, but the art is in the name. When someone on the ground shoots the thing down, the operator can say "they shot me right in the ARSS." Blew my ARSS right out of the air...
 
Broken11b, they can tell when you're lying, so it's no use.

And regarding the ones saying that you can shoot it down easily, I'm assuming that this will be able to fly/hover out of earshot. Plus, if the enemy sniper is preoccupied with a little drone that's trying to kill him then he has less time to kill our guys.
 
It looks like a crippled refridgerator. Amazing concept and technology though. Seems like a lot of military robots use XBOX controllers.
 
xbox controller is actually a very good piece of control equipment cheap off the shelf.
plus typical operator already knows how to use it.

so stop you kid going to the range or camping and get them playing video games your countrys future defence relies on it:D
 
I wouldn't be surprised if it takes a few seconds for the robot to acquire and identify a target. That does seem a bit slow, but this is also just a testing prototype.
 
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