A rare sight at AUSA: a tracked vehicle that is affordable. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
AUSA 2024 — Day three of the annual AUSA conference is done and dusted, and with it, the show itself comes to a close. But before all the equipment got packed away, Breaking Defense had some time to grab a few more photos of what you could see on the show floor.
As always, you can see our coverage from the conference by clicking here.
Lying down on the job: a medical model is shown on the AUSA 2024 show floor. While large vehicles tend to steal the spotlight, there is also a strong simulation showing at the conference. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Mack Defense stays on brand, with a camo-colored model of its bulldog logo keeping an eye on its much larger truck. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Defense giant Northrop Grumman shows off its Next Generation Handheld Targeting System (NGHTS), which the company says is designed to work in GPS-denied environments. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Connecticut-based Kaman Corporation offers unmanned cargo copters, as seen on the show floor at AUSA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Aimlock, which develops “semi-autonomous precision auto-targeting systems” attached a 12-guage shotgun on a ground robotic vehicle at AUSA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Defense start-up Anduril showed off a wide range of products and at AUSA 2024, including this platform from its “family of autonomous systems and Electromagnetic Warfare (EW) systems powered by Lattice and AI at the edge.” (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Australian firm EOS was at AUSA 2024, here displaying its Slinger kinetic counter-drone system. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
IEC Infrared Systems’s Lycan counter-UAS system gazes out at attendees at AUSA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Ammo handling specialists Nobles Worldwide brought its closed loop, linkless ammunition handling system to AUSA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
At AUSA 2024, land vehicle giant AM General rolled its HUMVEE 2-CT Hawkeye MHS, featuring a howitzer launcher on a hummer. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)