Anduril, Archer to Make New Military Aircraft for Critical Defense Applications

It also helps that the aero startup just raised another $430 million.

Transcript

Emerging American defense contractor Anduril and U.S.-based eVTOL startup Archer Aviation this morning announced an exclusive new partnership to jointly develop a hybrid VTOL aircraft for critical defense applications, targeting a potential program of record from the DOD. Those are programs that Congress not only intends to fund but has appropriated funding for them in the Future Years Defense Program.

The partners hope to bring together Anduril's expertise in AI and systems integration and Archer's ability to rapidly develop advanced VTOL aircraft using existing commercial parts and supply chains in a combined effort to accelerate time-to-market at a fraction of the cost of more traditional alternatives.

As part of the announcement, Archer launched a new program, Archer Defense, which will be supported, in part, by some $430 million in additional equity capital the company plans to also divvy up for other "general corporate purposes."

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The funds come from Stellantis, United, and new institutional investors, including Wellington Management and Abu Dhabi investment holding company 2PointZero, an IHC subsidiary. 

Shane Arnott, SVP of Engineering at Anduril, says, "Rapid innovation and scalable production are critical for maintaining technological superiority ... Anduril and Archer share a common vision for advancing capabilities that meet urgent national security needs."

The new military aircraft may be based, at least in part, on the company's Midnight eVTOL aircraft, which completed a transition flight while flying at more than 100 mph in June. The company believes the craft, weighing some 6,500 pounds, is one of the largest eVTOL aircraft to complete a transition. A transition flight occurs when the aircraft takes off vertically like a helicopter, accelerates forward, and transitions from thrust-borne to wing-borne flight like an airplane with tilt propellers forward before decelerating and landing vertically.

Adam Goldstein, founder and CEO of Archer, says the partnership and influx of capital will accelerate the development and deployment of advanced aerospace technologies at scale.

Archer Defense will be led by Joseph Pantalone, who recently joined Archer and has nearly 30 years of experience at Lockheed Martin and Sikorsky. 

IEN reached out to Archer regarding further information on development, manufacturing and the aircraft. A company spokesperson says, "The specific details of the program are confidential."

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