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.
