New Army Bot Blasts Land Mines With a 150-Foot Bomb-on-a-String
Warrior iRobot's Warrior is capable of casting a line of explosives. via IEEE Spectrum
iRobot unveiled Warrior over Memorial Day weekend, and this impressive video (after the jump) might make you proud to be a robot-loving American.
The Warrior is much bigger than its PackBot kin; where PackBot is hand-portable, Warrior is not. Military personnel remotely drive the robot close to the area that needs to be cleared, and then Warrior fires an APOBS, an Anti-Personnel Obstacle Breaching System. It's basically an explosive line charge with a parachute at the end.
The rocket drags a 150-foot line of grenades through the air, and once it lands, the grenades explode and destroy any improvised explosive devices, land mines or other obstacles. The result is a clear, secure path.
It’s similar to the Python explosive whip developed by the British Army. That weapon casts a 1,600-foot tube across the ground, like a fisherman, and explodes any mines, traps or IEDs in its path. But the Python is attached to an armored truck, while the Warrior can go almost anywhere, keeping a safe distance from its human operators.
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