Anduril ramps drone production
Anduril has started production of its FURY high‑speed combat drones at a new Ohio facility just days after the company announced expansion, and the U.S. Army has awarded Anduril a potential $20 billion deal for its Lattice AI sensor‑to‑shooter platform—signaling fast military demand for networked autonomy. This pairs rapid factory scaling with a blockbuster procurement pipeline that could reshape defense robotics spending and industrial capacity. ( )
Arsenal‑1, Anduril’s new manufacturing campus is sited in Pickaway County near Rickenbacker, and company and local officials say the site opened roughly three months ahead of an originally planned July 2026 target. (nbc4i.com) Anduril executive Matthew Grimm told reporters the Arsenal‑1 project is running both ahead of schedule and under budget. (ohiotechnews.com) Bloomberg reports the company plans a low‑automation, hand‑assembly approach for its uncrewed fighters at the Ohio site, with the first aircraft slated to roll off simplified production lines this summer. (bloomberg.com) Local filings and reporting put the campus’s employment impact at roughly 4,000 jobs by 2035 as the facility reaches full scale. (abc6onyourside.com) The Army’s award for Anduril was issued as a 10‑year enterprise contract vehicle intended to consolidate procurement of the company’s software, hardware and services and accelerate deliveries to soldiers. (techcrunch.com) Defense outlets note the vehicle initially carries no large up‑front cash obligation and that the Army has already issued a first task order under the new contract focused on counter‑drone capabilities. (breakingdefense.com) Multiple defense analysts and reporting name Lattice as the intended software backbone for C‑UAS and networked autonomy work under the Army vehicle, reflecting a push to field integrated sensor‑to‑shooter suites. (insideunmannedsystems.com)