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Drones: Industry & Defence
30APR

AeroVironment delivers four LOCUST X3 lasers to RCCTO for EHEL

3 min read
09:10UTC

Two laser systems mounted on Infantry Squad Vehicles and two on JLTVs arrived at the Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office for evaluation.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

LOCUST X3 hardware now sits at RCCTO, setting pace for the Western counter-drone laser contest.

AeroVironment delivered four LOCUST X3 laser systems to the Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office on 15 April, for EHEL programme evaluation. Two units are mounted on Infantry Squad Vehicles and two on the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle chassis, a deliberate split that allows RCCTO to evaluate the same weapon across light-mobility and protected-mobility carriers. The delivery is the first publicly-confirmed hardware arrival from any EHEL bidder at the evaluation authority.

AeroVironment unveiled the LOCUST X3 at AUSA in March and quoted a $5 per-engagement cost against Group 1-3 drones, the category that includes quadcopter-class FPV threats and small-to-medium fixed-wing reconnaissance drones. Delivery to RCCTO moves the programme from exhibition claim to evaluation test article.

AeroVironment's vehicle-integration choice carries a clear signal. Two on ISV and two on JLTV confirms the firm wants EHEL judged as a platform-agnostic counter-drone weapon rather than a single-carrier system, which is consistent with a procurement strategy aimed at multiple services and multiple force-package tiers. If the laser performs similarly well on both chassis the commercial envelope widens considerably.

RCCTO delivery also anchors the schedule for every directed-energy bidder watching EHEL timing. RCCTO evaluations do not yield programme-of-record selection by themselves, but they set the pace at which one or more EHEL bidders can present complete evidence for Army review. AeroVironment has now put hardware on the range. Competing bidders who have not done so yet will need to close that gap, and allied defence ministries watching the category for export-capable options will weight early-delivery vendors accordingly.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

AeroVironment is an American defence company that makes a laser weapon called LOCUST X3. Unlike a missile or a bullet, a laser can fire multiple times per second without running out of ammunition, and AeroVironment claims each shot costs about $5, far cheaper than any kinetic interceptor. The US Army runs a competition called EHEL (the Army laser counter-drone evaluation programme) to find the best counter-drone laser weapon. AeroVironment delivered four LOCUST X3 systems to the Army's evaluation authority for testing. Two were mounted on a light vehicle called the Infantry Squad Vehicle, and two on a heavier vehicle called the JLTV. Delivering on both types shows the weapon can work on different platforms. The Army will now test whether the laser performs as well in evaluation as AeroVironment's exhibition claims suggested.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

AeroVironment's RCCTO delivery reflects the same two-platform hedge strategy that characterises the firm's approach to counter-drone markets more broadly: by delivering on both Infantry Squad Vehicles and JLTVs simultaneously, AeroVironment avoids being locked into a single vehicle-integration path at the earliest evaluation stage.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Competing directed-energy bidders who have not yet delivered hardware to RCCTO will face an accumulated evaluation-data disadvantage as AeroVironment gathers performance records over the extended Q4 FY26 timeline.

First Reported In

Update #6 · Britain's £752M Ukraine drone package

Royal United Services Institute (RUSI)· 18 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
AeroVironment delivers four LOCUST X3 lasers to RCCTO for EHEL
LOCUST X3 is AeroVironment's entry into the Army's directed-energy counter-drone competition, and physical delivery to RCCTO is the step that moves the firm from announced bidder to formal entrant. For the drone-industry beat this delivery is the earliest practical indicator of how a credible Western industrial counter-drone laser product behaves under Army evaluation and at what integration tier it can sit across wheeled and tracked platforms.
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