
SpektreWorks
Phoenix startup that built LUCAS, the first US-made loitering munition to see combat.
Last refreshed: 4 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can SpektreWorks scale LUCAS from dozens to thousands before Gauntlet II?
Latest on SpektreWorks
- What is SpektreWorks LUCAS drone?
- LUCAS is a low-cost loitering munition built by SpektreWorks of Phoenix, Arizona. It carries an 18 kg payload over 500 miles with six hours of endurance at $35,000–$55,000 per unit.Source: DefenseScoop / Pentagon CTO statement
- Did SpektreWorks LUCAS see combat?
- Yes. LUCAS made its combat debut on 28 February 2026 during Operation Epic Fury, the US-Israeli campaign against Iranian military infrastructure.Source: DefenseScoop
- How many LUCAS drones does the US have?
- Pentagon CTO Emil Michael confirmed in March 2026 that the inventory stands at 'dozens', far short of the Drone Dominance programme's 300,000-drone target.Source: DefenseScoop
Background
SpektreWorks, a Phoenix, Arizona defence startup, became a household name in Pentagon procurement circles when its LUCAS (Low-cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System) loitering munition made its combat debut on 28 February 2026 during Operation Epic Fury, the US-Israeli campaign against Iranian military infrastructure. The system is the first US-developed loitering munition to see confirmed combat action, delivered under a $30 million initial Drone Dominance contract.
The company was founded to challenge the cost structures that have dominated US defence procurement. LUCAS carries an 18 kg payload over 500 miles with six hours of endurance, at a unit cost of $35,000 to $55,000 — roughly one per cent of a Patriot missile interceptor. SpektreWorks sits within the newer tier of non-traditional defence contractors that have bypassed traditional prime relationships to win direct Pentagon contracts.
Its weakness is production scale. Pentagon CTO Emil Michael confirmed in March 2026 that the LUCAS inventory stands at "dozens" against a Drone Dominance programme target of 300,000 drones by 2027. The Iran campaign arrived before SpektreWorks — or any US drone manufacturer — had built a meaningful stockpile.