APR 24, 2024 JLM 79°F 10:04 PM 03:04 PM EST
Israeli Roboteam's Probot participates in German military's field tests

The Israeli company’s UGV was tested for driving characteristics, remote control, combat shooting capabilities and more

The Probot, an unmanned ground vehicle (UVG) Made by Israeli company Roboteam, a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, took part in field tests conducted by the German Federal Military Procurement Manager (BAAINBw) and the office of German Army Development under the title "Unmanned Ground Vehicles to support dismounted forces". The German website Soldat & Technik says that the test program included driving characteristics, teleoperation / remote control, use of autonomous functions and combat shooting firing with the support of the UGVs.

Elbit describes the Probot as a professional robot for combat, reconnaissance and logistics tasks. The compact UGV (L / W / H: 1.95m / 1.33m / 1.12m) weighs 435 kg and can carry 750 kg payload. Electric drive on all four wheels (optionally with an additional rubber chain) from a 48V battery enables eight hours of operation at a speed of up to twelve km/h.

Controlled from a hardened operator console, the Probot can record 360 images  with day / night vision cameras -- supported by infrared lighting -- together with GPS data and transmit them via a secure mobile IP ad hoc network with mesh function. Under line-of-sight conditions, the range is 1,500 meters.

The website notes that the Probot has been in use in the IDF for some time, and the French army has selected a version of the Probot for tests during a mission. According to the French military’s announcement from last May, the system had prevailed against four other providers in the run-up to the competition.

Did you find this article interesting?
Comments
To leave a comment, please log in

DISCOVER MORE

"Iron Swords" - War in Gaza Benjamin Netanyahu Hamas The Iran Threat Biden Administration The Leftist-Islamist Alliance Hezbollah Israeli Technology Palestine = Hamas = ISIS Israeli_Nature 10/7 Hamas Massacres Biblical Archaeology Jihadi Infiltration into the West Heroes of Israel The Bible Muslim Persecution of Jews