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Drones: Industry & Defence
18APR

RTX demos reusable Coyote against swarms

4 min read
13:54UTC

RTX on 21 April reported a Foreign Military Sales case approved for Coyote sales to the UAE and demonstrated a non-kinetic reusable Coyote variant capable of engaging a drone swarm, returning to base, and redeploying.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

RTX's reusable Coyote answers the cost-per-engagement problem; effectors crossed 40% of Raytheon segment sales.

RTX reported on Tuesday 21 April that effectors now make up over 40% of Raytheon segment sales, with double-digit growth in Q1, and that a Foreign Military Sales case (US government brokered defence export, FMS) has been approved for Coyote counter-drone sales to the United Arab Emirates 1. Raytheon also demonstrated something the C-UAS field had not seen before: a non-kinetic, reusable Coyote variant that engages a drone swarm, returns to base, recharges, and redeploys for the next salvo. Collins Aerospace, the RTX subsidiary, separately completed a flight test of its mission autonomy software for the Air Force CCA programme.

The reusable Coyote is the first declared response to the cost-per-engagement problem that drove the AeroVironment LOCUST X3 delivery to the Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office (RCCTO) at $5 per engagement and the UK's emergency Skyhammer buy. A kinetic Coyote round costs in the low six figures; a non-kinetic reusable variant collapses that to the cost of recharging and refurbishment per sortie. Whether the unit-economics work depends on how many engagements a single airframe can absorb before refurbishment exceeds the price of a fresh Coyote, which RTX has not yet disclosed.

Collins Aerospace's flight test puts a third autonomy stack into a CCA competition that had appeared to be Shield AI Hivemind versus Anduril's Lattice. Collins brings the full RTX Foreign Military Sales channel into a fight that had been dominated by venture-backed software firms; the Air Force programme office now has three credible bidders rather than two, and the procurement-office logic shifts from sole-source justification to genuine downselection.

Gulf attrition since 28 February has made the UAE the most operationally relevant non-US C-UAS customer, and the Coyote sale converts that demand into a roughly $1.5 billion programme of record over the next decade. The effectors share of Raytheon segment sales crossing 40% is the structural marker: missiles, interceptors and counter-drone rounds are now the majority of the segment's revenue, ahead of radars and command-and-control systems for the first time in RTX's history.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Raytheon Technologies reported on 21 April that more than 40% of its weapons-division revenue now comes from effectors; missiles and interceptors; rather than radar and command systems. The US approved the sale of Coyote, a counter-drone interceptor, to the United Arab Emirates. Raytheon also showed a new version of Coyote that uses electronic jamming rather than an explosive warhead. After engaging a drone swarm, this version can fly back to base, recharge, and fly again. If the economics hold, one aircraft replaces dozens of expensive single-use missiles over a conflict. Separately, a Raytheon subsidiary flight-tested software that lets unmanned combat aircraft fly cooperatively without human pilots.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Effectors crossing 40% of Raytheon segment sales reflects a structural demand shift that Gulf attrition data produced. The UAE's absorption of 55% of loitering-munition strikes since 28 February 2026 generated emergency FMS case demand that Raytheon's existing Coyote production line could not fill from stock.

The UAE FMS approval accelerated a case that would normally take 18 to 24 months through the formal FMS pipeline to roughly half that time; a political decision driven by the UAE's operational losses rather than the standard foreign-partner notification cycle.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Collins Aerospace's CCA autonomy flight test puts a third credible software stack into the Air Force Collaborative Combat Aircraft competition, reducing the probability of a sole-source award to either Shield AI or Anduril and increasing the likelihood of a competitive downselection.

  • Opportunity

    If RTX publishes reusable Coyote refurbishment economics before the FY2027 NDAA markup, it gains a first-mover advantage in the reusable-effector category; a market that does not yet formally exist in Pentagon procurement doctrine.

First Reported In

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