A Teledyne extended range, deepwater multibeam sensor has been fitted to the gondola/keel and will be used to collect military bathymetric data, while a Navtech HD radar has been integrated into the software stack, increasing the situational awareness for even small objects at up to one kilometre away.

“Exercises like REPMUS_DYMS bring navies, researchers and industry together to test uncrewed technology in demanding missions,” said Ian Danbury, lead planner for the underwater component of the exercises. “The involvement of companies such as Zero USV ensures NATO can see how emerging systems integrate with conventional fleets and where they can add real value.”