The Pentagon advanced 19 of 49 companies to the final stage of its Drone Dominance programme on 2 July and ordered each survivor to build and deliver 120 armed drones within roughly five weeks 1. Drone Dominance is the US Department of Defense effort to mass-produce cheap attack drones; the 49 firms had tested at Camp Grayling, Michigan, through 20 June , and this cut drops 30 of them .
Delivering 120 armed drones in five weeks tests a factory, not a prototype. Stage one ranked prototypes on performance; this stage ranks production lines. A company can fly the best drone at Fort Carson, Colorado, in August and still be dropped for lacking a line that turns out 120 airframes on a war footing. That is the filter the programme, worth $1.1 billion for up to 60,000 one-way attack (OWA) drones, now applies.
The survivors include Teal Drones, the Red Cat subsidiary ; Neros, which cleared 43% acceptance in the earlier FPV round ; and Skycutter, tested alongside Ukrainian entrants in June , plus Auterion, ModalAI, XTEND and the Ukrainian firm General Cherry. No production awards follow until the August live-fire, so the field may thin again before the money moves.
