Robot Dogs Now Have Assault Rifles Mounted On Their Backs - That thing come to my house, I'mma kill it.


host Robotics and SWORD International have teamed up to create a rifle-toting "robot dog." Called the Special Purpose Unmanned Rifle, or SPUR, the system adds a 6.5mm Creedmoor rifle from SWORD to one of Ghost Robotics' quadrupedal unmanned ground vehicles, or Q-UGVs.
The SPUR made its debut on the show floor at the Association of the U.S. Army's main annual convention in Washington, D.C., which opened yesterday. Though Ghost Robotics is partnered with a number of other companies to explore defense and security applications, among others, for its Q-UGVs — which you can read more about in this past War Zone feature — this appears to be the first example of one of these unmanned systems with an actual weapon mounted on it. Unarmed examples of the Q-UGV are notably already in limited use with the U.S. Air Force's 325th Security Forces Squadron at Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida and are being tested by other units within that service.


The exact configuration of the 6.5mm gun inside the SPUR module — how much ammunition it contains, and how hard it might be to reload — are all unclear. Ghost Robotics has said that SPUR can be instructed remotely to chamber the first round from an unloaded state, as well as clear the chamber and safe the gun.



In terms of the weapon itself, SWORD does offer derivatives of the 5.56x45mm AR-15/M16 family, as well as similar, but larger caliber guns, more akin to the Armalite AR-10 or Knights Armament Company SR-25. Those rifles come in calibers such as 7.62x51mm, 6.5mm Creedmoor, .300 Norma Magnum, .338 Lapua Magnum, and .338 Norma Magnum. The weapon used in the SPUR module looks like it could have a sound suppressor fitted to the front end, which could make it more difficult for opponents to determine where the shooting might be coming from.

message-editor%2F1634069033880-sword-gungnir.jpg

SWORD INTERNATIONAL
A SWORD International MK-17 Mod 1 Gungnir rifle, which is chambered in 6.5mm Creedmoor.
The 6.5mm Creedmoor is not currently in any kind of widespread use by the military or other security forces, either in the United States or elsewhere around the world. However, U.S. Special Operations Command is notably in the process of acquiring light machine guns and rifles in this caliber, ostensibly to fill an intermediate niche in overall performance between existing 5.56x45mm and 7.62x51mm guns, as you can read more about here. Testing has shown that this 6.5mm round actually offers increased range over the various 7.62x51mm cartridges that are available to the U.S. special operations community now.



HERE IS WHAT THE AIR FORCE'S NEW ROBOT DOGS ARE ACTUALLY CAPABLE OFBy Brett TingleyPosted in THE WAR ZONE
THE AIR FORCE JUST TESTED "ROBOT DOGS" FOR USE IN BASE SECURITYBy Brett Tingley and Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE
U.S. SPECIAL OPERATORS WILL SOON BE USING THIS 6.5MM "ASSAULT" MACHINE GUNBy Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
SPECIAL OPERATORS GETTING A NEW ROUND FOR THEIR PRECISION RIFLES AND AN 'ASSAULT' MACHINE GUNBy Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
EARLY CHRISTMAS PRESENT: ARMY RECEIVES POTENTIALLY REVOLUTIONARY UNMANNED GROUND VEHICLESBy Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
There is limited information about the SPUR available now, but The War Zone has already reached out to Ghost Robotics for more information. Ghost Robotics says that SPUR is capable of precision fire out to 1,200 meters, or nearly 3,940 feet. This unmanned system already features impressive stabilization capabilities simply as a result of its quadrupedal design.
"When our robots move around and you shove them, these forces are computed at 2,000 calculations per second per leg," Ghost Robotics CEO and founder Jiren Parikh told The War Zone's Brett Tingley in an interview last year, adding that the system is designed in such a way as to work to ensure it can keep functioning even if various onboard sensors it can use to help move around fail.
"We’re adjusting it to make it like a mammal. Our robot, when you see it climbing stairs or walking or running around, we turn off all the sensors," he continued. "It’s just feeling. It’s completely blind. The reason we do that is because if a warfighter or a mining company, if anybody is using our robot, this robot had better operate 99.99% of the time."


As for targeting, the SPUR module appears to have its own sighting system on top. In past testing the U.S. Air Force has conducted using unarmed Q-UGVs, operators have utilized the Android Team Awareness Kit (ATAK), an app that can be installed on tablet-like devices, to interact with these unmanned systems and view the feeds from their onboard video cameras. It seems likely that ATAK or a similar piece of software could be used to enable a human to aim at targets and engage with them with the robot's 6.5mm rifle. The Air Force has also discussed potentially operating Q-UGVs remotely from centralized command facilities via virtual reality headsets.

message-editor%2F1634068609430-q-ugv-tablet-controller.jpg

USAF
A member of the US Air Force interacts with a Ghost Robotics Q-UGV using a tablet-like controller during a demonstration at Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida.
SPUR could also have some degree of additional autonomy, now or in the future, potentially employing artificial intelligence-driven capabilities to at least detect and "lock on" to potential threats, even if an operator ultimately has to give the approval to start shooting. Sighting systems for small arms that offer these kinds of capabilities are available on the open market now.
Regardless, giving the Q-UGV a weapon of its own offers a way for it to immediately prosecute any targets it might come across, if desired. This could be especially valuable given the idea that these "robot dogs," just like their real counterparts, will be able to get into tight spaces that present significant risks for their human "handlers," or just be hard for a person to access all. A 6.5mm Creedmoor gun would give it the option of engaging threats at more extended ranges, as well. This could be highly advantageous for perimeter security tasks, which is already one of its key missions, at least in expeditionary scenarios, as well as for scouting and urban warfare military operations.
“These dogs will be an extra set of eyes and ears while computing large amounts of data at strategic locations throughout Tyndall Air Force Base,” Air Force Major Jordan Criss, the head of the 325th Security Forces Squadron, said in a statement after a test involving the Q-UGVs last year. “They will be a huge enhancement for our defenders and allow flexibility in the posting and response of our personnel.”
The option now of arming the Q-UGVs adds a new tier of capability to these unmanned systems that could increase their flexibility when employed in various roles. At the same time, the idea of arming quadrupedal unmanned systems, which already prompt very different kinds of reactions compared to more traditional unmanned ground vehicles, may sit unfavorably with some. Those types of responses may well increase just as Ghost Robotics' product line, including unarmed types, becomes increasingly more autonomous.


At the same time, small armed unmanned ground systems are hardly new, and the military utility of adding weapon systems to quadrupedal designs is obvious.
Contact the author: joe@thedrive.com

Man, that thing looks dumb as fuck. Should've never let anime fans design robots.

Pro-Gamer Tip:
Here are some ways to take it out: Blind it with a green laser. Fry it with a magnetron from a busted microwave. Find the operator and punch them in their dumb cunt face.
 
I for one can't wait to see what kind of cool adversarial attacks people will come up with to fuck with this thing's neural net.

From the simple "dress up in enemy's uniform" to strategic applications of shoe polish ala "Dazzle camo" as seen below.
dwhhjb8wmyi71.jpg
"You guys are stupid. They're gonna be looking for normies guys."
 
Even if they slap thermal vision onto that thing, a 50c mylar space blanket will stop it. It's like thermal camo.

I always wanted to move to the rural countryside so I could have a garden, maybe some chickens and/or a goat, and work from home. But I'm single so I'm afraid of methheads or lost joggers. Now, in addition to an irl dog, I can have an army of Spots to gun down any raiders and keep me, the kittehs, doggos, chickens and goats safe.

It's literally pre-war Fallout but instead of a Mr Handy its Spot.
Donkeys can be surprisingly formidable in that scenario, at least against coyotes and other four-legged predators.

Boston Dynamics' Spot is not the best for this purpose, their sensors can be lacking. It doesn't even do SLAM navigation (dynamically updating the map as it navigates, recording landmarks, plotting new routes dynamically, etc.) There's an added LIDAR module to it but it's expensive as shit.

Best option is something custom made. No point in having an expensive walking robot with a 6.5mm when it's cheaper and more effective to have a swarm of flying disposable drones armed with .22 beehive rounds, buzzing around the woods at high speeds (for example), providing harassing fire and sending back sensor data. Then add some higher caliber fixed sentry guns converging lines of fire on key chokepoints, some automated mortars picking up targeting info from the drone swarm to allow you to reach beyond the line of sight. IFF identification can be done based on EM signatures from their comms. equipment and such.
 
Even if they slap thermal vision onto that thing, a 50c mylar space blanket will stop it. It's like thermal camo.


Donkeys can be surprisingly formidable in that scenario, at least against coyotes and other four-legged predators.

Boston Dynamics' Spot is not the best for this purpose, their sensors can be lacking. It doesn't even do SLAM navigation (dynamically updating the map as it navigates, recording landmarks, plotting new routes dynamically, etc.) There's an added LIDAR module to it but it's expensive as shit.

Best option is something custom made. No point in having an expensive walking robot with a 6.5mm when it's cheaper and more effective to have a swarm of flying disposable drones armed with .22 beehive rounds, buzzing around the woods at high speeds (for example), providing harassing fire and sending back sensor data. Then add some higher caliber fixed sentry guns converging lines of fire on key chokepoints, some automated mortars picking up targeting info from the drone swarm to allow you to reach beyond the line of sight. IFF identification can be done based on EM signatures from their comms. equipment and such.
And this is why I need a man. I mean sure, that's all doable for me (I fixed my own car, I do my own plumbing and can build my own PC) but time is scarce when you're alone. : (

It doesn't even do SLAM navigation

My damn Roombas do it, I tinkered with that module that let you program early Roombas so I'm sure I can teach this dog to nav.
 
And this is why I need a man. I mean sure, that's all doable for me (I fixed my own car, I do my own plumbing and can build my own PC) but time is scarce when you're alone. : (
Check around the local engineering school. Some of them clean up well after a shower and a shave. Maybe two showers.

My damn Roombas do it, I tinkered with that module that let you program early Roombas so I'm sure I can teach this dog to nav.
There are some open source projects that are a bit more affordable to play around with.

Mini Cheetah is a good design too.
 
And this is why I need a man. I mean sure, that's all doable for me (I fixed my own car, I do my own plumbing and can build my own PC) but time is scarce when you're alone. : (
Build yourself a Robot dog with a Machine gun.. it can also be a lover if you are a white girl...
 
  • Feels
Reactions: IAmNotAlpharius
My question is why you would stick a 6.5 Creedmoor on this thing. Planning on going sniping with your robot dog? Why not just put a 5.56mm with one of those fancy Tracking Point systems? Are 6.5 Creedmoor sales hurting or something?
 
My question is why you would stick a 6.5 Creedmoor on this thing. Planning on going sniping with your robot dog? Why not just put a 5.56mm with one of those fancy Tracking Point systems? Are 6.5 Creedmoor sales hurting or something?
I guess the idea is that it's a mobile remotely-controlled sniping platform that can get within range of the enemy without worrying about return fire. I'd still rather slap something like that on a flying drone that can land in inaccessible places (think a cliff side), get into position, take a few shots, and fuck off to a new location. Can have it sit there for days, waiting for a target. Definitely need some kind of legs to stabilize after it lands and to help it get into position.

Or just mount it on a drone blimp so it can loiter in air for days and shoot without landing, can top off the batteries with solar. The hard part will be stabilizing it and compensating for wind and varying air pressure. Blimps also make for easy targets.
 
I guess the idea is that it's a mobile remotely-controlled sniping platform that can get within range of the enemy without worrying about return fire. I'd still rather slap something like that on a flying drone that can land in inaccessible places (think a cliff side), get into position, take a few shots, and fuck off to a new location. Can have it sit there for days, waiting for a target. Definitely need some kind of legs to stabilize after it lands and to help it get into position.

Or just mount it on a drone blimp so it can loiter in air for days and shoot without landing, can top off the batteries with solar. The hard part will be stabilizing it and compensating for wind and varying air pressure.
Sounds like a bad idea to me, there's reasons why snipers work in pairs. Also, if you're going to make a sniper platform, go .300 Win Mag or .338 Lapua. What would be more useful would be a mobile platform like the dog thing to carry a heavy weapon. Get something that could hump a machine gun or even act as a stable firing platform for a team to fire one from. SEALs would probably just use it to carry their sunglasses and cocaine.
 
Sounds like a bad idea to me, there's reasons why snipers work in pairs. Also, if you're going to make a sniper platform, go .300 Win Mag or .338 Lapua. What would be more useful would be a mobile platform like the dog thing to carry a heavy weapon. Get something that could hump a machine gun or even act as a stable firing platform for a team to fire one from. SEALs would probably just use it to carry their sunglasses and cocaine.
Technically you can have two people remotely operating a single sniping platform using multiple cameras. Like a high magnification one for aiming, and a wide angle one for situational awareness. Augment that with target highlighting and tracking, add some data feeds from satellites or other drones in the area... you get the idea.

Overall a robotic sniper platform would operate quite differently from a traditional sniper pair. It can be airdropped easily, doesn't need supplies, doesn't get tired, and is built to operate in conjunction with other systems. That's both an advantage and a major limitation. Network goes down, it's fucked.

As for the choice of ammo, it's probably a combination of logistics (because the military is gay for 6.5 now) and weight saving.
 
Technically you can have two people remotely operating a single sniping platform using multiple cameras. Like a high magnification one for aiming, and a wide angle one for situational awareness. Augment that with target highlighting and tracking, add some data feeds from satellites or other drones in the area... you get the idea.

Overall a robotic sniper platform would operate quite differently from a traditional sniper pair. It can be airdropped easily, doesn't need supplies, doesn't get tired, and is built to operate in conjunction with other systems. That's both an advantage and a major limitation. Network goes down, it's fucked.
Or when it's battery dies. Endurance would be a major issue. You'd also lose any real situational awareness, having to rely on cameras and microphones and transmission delays. I don't see how it brings anything to the table more valuable then a traditional scout/sniper pairing would. All those other systems can already work with actual boots on the ground, the ones that actually exist.

Also your real scout/sniper team can't be picked up and thrown into a tree and broken when it's operators are too busy watching tranny porn in their air conditioned trailer and lose situational awareness. It might have some value as a disposable scout unit, but I wouldn't trust some robot operated by some dipshit as a sniper.
As for the choice of ammo, it's probably a combination of logistics (because the military is gay for 6.5 now) and weight saving.
6.5 Creedmoor is fundamentally different from the 6.5mm the Army proper has been playing around with for years. USSOCOM has been looking at standardizing everything, but that's kinda dumb. Creedmoor is explicitly a long-range round that gains most of its benefits from 20in and other long barrels. It wouldn't exactly be my first choice for room clearing. Or weight saving, it's a .308 replacement, so it's heavier than 5.56 and you'll get less rounds. Smells like contractor faggotry.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Flaming Insignias
Back