Platform Aerospace, based in Hollywood, Maryland, received a $12.9 million Navy research, development, test and evaluation award on 15 April for Vanilla long-endurance UAS hardware, spares, engineering and logistics, with completion in August 2026. Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division issued the contract. No major trade publication carried the award, which appeared only on the Defense Department daily contracts digest picked up by GlobalSecurity.org.
Trade-press silence on the award tells its own story. Pentagon drone coverage is currently dominated by Arsenal-1's expansion to four weapons platforms and the Gulf-driven strike procurement push. Platform Aerospace's award is evidence that the Navy's long-endurance ISR doctrine continues on a separate track from Army strike doctrine, with different vendors, different timelines, and different performance envelopes. Vanilla is solar-hybrid high-altitude long-endurance, a category the scale-or-die narrative tends to ignore.
The RDT&E scope matters. This is research, development, test and evaluation funding, not a procurement line. It covers hardware, spares, engineering and logistics through August, which reads as a sustainment-and-maturation package rather than a volume production order. That profile is consistent with a Navy programme keeping a specialist platform current rather than accelerating it into the Army-style mass production frame.
For mid-market US drone firms the lesson is that quiet specialist work is still being funded by Navy contracting authorities such as NSWC Crane, even as the loudest parts of the industry chase Lethality Prize qualification and Arsenal-1-adjacent scale. For the wider drone-industrial picture, the Navy's continuing investment in solar-hybrid HALE ISR is a counterpoint to the attritable-strike-only story and worth tracking as a parallel doctrine.
