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The floor at AUSA 2021. (via AUSA Flickr)

AUSA 2022 — The Association of the United States’ Army conference, the biggest defense trade show in the US, is underway in downtown Washington, DC this week. In addition to the usual expert coverage readers expect from Breaking Defense, the team will be bringing the show floor to readers who can’t attend with photos and videos for all three days of the show.

Please enjoy a video wrap-up and, below, some of the top shots from day one.

Two Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicles by Bae Systems

Two new Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicles (AMPV) sit at the booth by Bae Systems. The vehicles are meant to replace the Army’s venerable, but old M113s. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith)

Ghost Robotics Vision 60

The military’s no-so-furry friendly robot dogs are back at AUSA this year. This model, called the Vision 60 Q-UGV from Ghost Robotics, is an “all-weather ground robot for use in a broad range of unstructured urban and natural environments for defense, homeland and enterprise applications,” the company says. (Brendon Smith/Breaking Defense)

Palantir TITAN

Palantir shows off its prototype for the Tactical Intelligence Targeting Access Node (TITAN) vehicle. The company says the TITAN “will be the critical backbone that provides correlation, fusion, and integration of sensor data alongside insights from AI/ML overlaid at the tactical edge.” In other words, it’s meant to find the signal in the noise. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith)

 

GM Defense Ev Hummer

The GMC Hummer EV Platform, the first vehicle on GM’s New Ultium EV Platform, goes on display at AUSA 2022. All-electric offerings are the center of much of the Army’s attention these days as it aims to electrify its non-tactical, and eventually tactical, fleet. (Breaking Defense/Brendon Smith)

 

Model of Boeing Apache AH-64E shown Association of US Army Conference in 2022.

Model of the new Boeing Apache AH-64E design shown Association of US Army Conference in 2022. (Brendon Smith/Breaking Defense.)

 

Lockhead Martin Raider X Helicopter

Lockheed Martin teamed up with Sikorsky to produce the Raider X, the team’s competitor in the Army’s Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA) program, one of two high-profile Army Future Vertical Lift contests currently underway. (Brendon Smith/Breaking Defense)

 

ANDURIL Mobile Sentry

The defense start-up Anduril has expanded its footprint in the defense market in recent years. This product, the Mobile Sentry, “brings autonomous fixed site counter UAS and counter intrusion capabilities into a mobile form factor,” the company says. (Brendon Smith/Breaking Defense)

 

BELL 360 Invictus

The Bell 360 Invictus is the other FARA competitor, looking to beat out the Lockheed-Sikorsky team. The Army’s expected to make its decision in fiscal 2024. (Brendon Smith/Breaking Defense)