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Iran revealed an anti-drone rifle

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Iran revealed an anti-drone rifle
Drone jamming, for future clashes

By Kelsey D. Atherton
irandronegun.jpg
Tasnim News Agency

Iranian Anti-Drone Rifle

It looks like it's a gun but really it's an antenna that makes drones crash.

Antennas are the latest weapon in the war on drones. Small, unmanned flying robots can scout the locations of troops, help artillery commanders aim attacks, and sometimes even carry explosives themselves.

To catch drones, police and militaries are experimenting with everything from eagles to lasers. Yet in battlefields like northern Iraq, the answer is neither avian capture nor directed light: it’s radio frequencies generated by antennas and pointed at the drones. The latest is an Iranian design:

Spotted by Conflict News contributor Derek Bisaccio, this anti-drone rifle comes to us from Tasnim News, an Iranian media service. The anti-drone rifle was unveiled during a military exercise by Iran’s army. Tasnim describes it as “a drone jammer, a portable electronic device used for deflecting the hostile flying objects.”

According to the brief description provided by Tasnim, the drone jammer can lock onto an enemy drone, and then “disrupt its operation or even hack the aircraft and force it to land safely.” More pictures of the weapon are available at a Tasnim gallery.

While we don’t know more about this particularly anti-drone antenna/rifle yet, we’ve seen other similar designs. The Battelle Memorial Institute built an anti-drone antenna that mounts to a rifle, and called it the “DroneDefender.” A more recent version of that weapon was spotted deployed in Iraq earlier this year. In November, drone jamming company Drone Shield unveiled the DroneGun, a similar antenna-rifle with a backpack power supply. The whole effect looked a little bit Ghostbusters in appearance.

Rather than jamming a drone, the Army Cyber Institute at West Point built an antenna-and-computer rifle that fed information into an open channel of an unlocked Parrot drone. This allowed the cyber rifle to send an override code to the Parrot drone, crashing it, without violating FCC and FAA rules on jammers. At a training exercise this summer, West Point cadets encountered a drone on a simulated raid, and had to use the cyber-rifle to knock it out of the sky. The consequence, for a team that failed to plan around the drone, was an artillery strike that took out the entire machine gun section of the platoon.

The United States has no monopoly on anti-drone technology. As insurgents turn drones into bombs, and conventional military forces plan to outfit every squads with its own flying scout, anti-drone weapons may become as common on the battlefields of the 21st century as anti-tank weapons were in the 20th.

Iran revealed an anti-drone rifle | Popular Science
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Range: 3km
Frequency Range:2.3 - 2.5GHz
Radiation power:30W
Antenna type: ‎directional LPDA (Log-Periodic Dipole Array)
 
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Iran revealed an anti-drone rifle
Drone jamming, for future clashes

By Kelsey D. Atherton
irandronegun.jpg
Tasnim News Agency

Iranian Anti-Drone Rifle

It looks like it's a gun but really it's an antenna that makes drones crash.

Antennas are the latest weapon in the war on drones. Small, unmanned flying robots can scout the locations of troops, help artillery commanders aim attacks, and sometimes even carry explosives themselves.

To catch drones, police and militaries are experimenting with everything from eagles to lasers. Yet in battlefields like northern Iraq, the answer is neither avian capture nor directed light: it’s radio frequencies generated by antennas and pointed at the drones. The latest is an Iranian design:

Spotted by Conflict News contributor Derek Bisaccio, this anti-drone rifle comes to us from Tasnim News, an Iranian media service. The anti-drone rifle was unveiled during a military exercise by Iran’s army. Tasnim describes it as “a drone jammer, a portable electronic device used for deflecting the hostile flying objects.”

According to the brief description provided by Tasnim, the drone jammer can lock onto an enemy drone, and then “disrupt its operation or even hack the aircraft and force it to land safely.” More pictures of the weapon are available at a Tasnim gallery.

While we don’t know more about this particularly anti-drone antenna/rifle yet, we’ve seen other similar designs. The Battelle Memorial Institute built an anti-drone antenna that mounts to a rifle, and called it the “DroneDefender.” A more recent version of that weapon was spotted deployed in Iraq earlier this year. In November, drone jamming company Drone Shield unveiled the DroneGun, a similar antenna-rifle with a backpack power supply. The whole effect looked a little bit Ghostbusters in appearance.

Rather than jamming a drone, the Army Cyber Institute at West Point built an antenna-and-computer rifle that fed information into an open channel of an unlocked Parrot drone. This allowed the cyber rifle to send an override code to the Parrot drone, crashing it, without violating FCC and FAA rules on jammers. At a training exercise this summer, West Point cadets encountered a drone on a simulated raid, and had to use the cyber-rifle to knock it out of the sky. The consequence, for a team that failed to plan around the drone, was an artillery strike that took out the entire machine gun section of the platoon.

The United States has no monopoly on anti-drone technology. As insurgents turn drones into bombs, and conventional military forces plan to outfit every squads with its own flying scout, anti-drone weapons may become as common on the battlefields of the 21st century as anti-tank weapons were in the 20th.

Iran revealed an anti-drone rifle | Popular Science
--------
Range: 3km
Frequency Range:2.3 - 2.5GHz
Radiation power:30W
Antenna type: ‎directional LPDA (Log-Periodic Dipole Array)
Why does it look like a dildo on a rifle? Seriously. Where's the scope? Is he trained? This is funny!
 
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Ok, you gotta admit it looks funny looking lmao.

I've seen other drone rifles look more professional than a rifle with a black stick welded on to it. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

(I really don't mean any disrespect though).
 
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Why does it look like a dildo on a rifle? Seriously. Where's the scope? Is he trained? This is funny!
well, I'm sure if you had one, you couldn't find any other use for yourself!
cyberrifleother.jpg





Ok, you gotta admit it looks funny looking lmao.

I've seen other drone rifles look more professional than a rifle with a black stick welded on to it. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

(I really don't mean any disrespect though).
The reason I posted this article was because it had enough examples to compare with other rifles, if you would bother to check.

the only difference between Iranian one and the American one is that in our product the dipole rod elements are protected in a shield. so is it really funny?!
 
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Next step

Star-Wars-Battlefront.jpg


:omghaha:

Topic


However these are solutions for smaller consumer drones actually
 
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مجبورید در مورد تمام کاردستی های نزاجا تاپیک بزنید که مسخرتون کنن ؟
 
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مجبورید در مورد تمام کاردستی های نزاجا تاپیک بزنید که مسخرتون کنن ؟
اگر از مسخره بازی خوشت نمیاد برو توی همون وب سایتهای ایرانی بچرخ. اینجا شاهاد 129 رو هم مسخره میکنن
اون آشغالی که آمریکاییها استفاده میکنن کاردستی نیست ولی مال ما کاردستیه؟ خوش به حالت

Soldier Shoots Down Drone With Cyber Rifle At Defense Secretary's Feet
A coding (but not smoking) gun

By Kelsey D. Atherton March 23, 2016
antidronerifle.jpg
Screenshot by author, from Twitter

Cyber Rifle Downs Drone

Secretary of Defense Ash Carter is just out of frame on the right side of the screen.

As soon as it was airborne, the drone flying inside West Point crashed to the ground at the feet of Secretary of Defense Ash Carter. The soldier responsible for the drone’s demise gently lowered the weapon, no smoke wafting from its barrel, not even a sound made with the shot.


Built by the Army Cyber Institute at West Point, the rifle was demonstrated last fall at the Association of the United States Army exposition in Washington, DC


لابد باید صبر کنیم تا آمریکاییها عملیاتیش کنن تا امثال شما و خانوم ابتکار مطمئن شین که کاردستی نیست بلکه تکنولوژی آیندست!

However these are solutions for smaller consumer drones actually
or hand-launched military drones. though terrorists are using the commercial drones.
 
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Its good concept ,electronic warfare have many forms and I'm glad we are working on every aspect of it . such systems are necessary for protecting troops and buildings from suicide drone attack launched by enemies . I believe the next steps is to build an semi automated system something equipped with small radar and mounted on a torrent like system to protect ships and buildings from such attacks.
 
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well, I'm sure if you had one, you couldn't find any other use for yourself!
cyberrifleother.jpg






The reason I posted this article was because it had enough examples to compare with other rifles, if you would bother to check.

the only difference between Iranian one and the American one is that in our product the dipole rod elements are protected in a shield. so is it really funny?!

I'm sorry, I really didn't mean to offend. I digress, though if it works then it works.
 
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Considering the fact that isis and the other terrorists in syria have started using home made and commercially available drones a weapon like this is overdue.
 
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Popular Science

Antennas are the latest weapon in the war on drones. Small, unmanned flying robots can scout the locations of troops, help artillery commanders aim attacks, and sometimes even carry explosives themselves.

To catch drones, police and militaries are experimenting with everything from eagles to lasers. Yet in battlefields like northern Iraq, the answer is neither avian capture nor directed light: it’s radio frequencies generated by antennas and pointed at the drones. The latest is an Iranian design:

Spotted by Conflict News contributor Derek Bisaccio, this anti-drone rifle comes to us from Tasnim News, an Iranian media service. The anti-drone rifle was unveiled during a military exercise by Iran’s army. Tasnim describes it as “a drone jammer, a portable electronic device used for deflecting the hostile flying objects.”

According to the brief description provided by Tasnim, the drone jammer can lock onto an enemy drone, and then “disrupt its operation or even hack the aircraft and force it to land safely.” More pictures of the weapon are available at a Tasnim gallery.

While we don’t know more about this particularly anti-drone antenna/rifle yet, we’ve seen other similar designs. The Battelle Memorial Institute built an anti-drone antenna that mounts to a rifle, and called it the “DroneDefender.” A more recent version of that weapon was spotted deployed in Iraq earlier this year. In November, drone jamming company Drone Shield unveiled the DroneGun, a similar antenna-rifle with a backpack power supply. The whole effect looked a little bit Ghostbusters in appearance.

Rather than jamming a drone, the Army Cyber Institute at West Point built an antenna-and-computer rifle that fed information into an open channel of an unlocked Parrot drone. This allowed the cyber rifle to send an override code to the Parrot drone, crashing it, without violating FCC and FAA rules on jammers. At a training exercise this summer, West Point cadets encountered a drone on a simulated raid, and had to use the cyber-rifle to knock it out of the sky. The consequence, for a team that failed to plan around the drone, was an artillery strike that took out the entire machine gun section of the platoon.

The United States has no monopoly on anti-drone technology. As insurgents turn drones into bombs, and conventional military forces plan to outfit every squads with its own flying scout, anti-drone weapons may become as common on the battlefields of the 21st century as anti-tank weapons were in the 20th.

http://www.popsci.com/iran-anti-drone-rifle
 
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NEZAJA (army ground forces) revealed yet another anti drone rifle dubbed Shahin.
It has three forms: standalone handheld, backpack and mounted. it's range is between 2 to 10 km.
8701439_392.jpg

1803119_597.jpg

shahin rifle.jpg

shahin rifle2.jpg
 
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