P3 / Counter-UAS
You can't know whether your facility would detect and respond to a hostile drone until someone flies one at it — lawfully, with your authorization, and with a findings report at the end.
Facilities invest in drone-detection sensors and write response plans, then rarely test either under realistic conditions. A documented, authorized assessment shows what your people and your systems actually do when an unmanned aircraft shows up where it shouldn't.
Acting as the adversary (OPFOR), we fly representative UAS profiles against your site — under your written authorization and with proper airspace coordination — to exercise your detection, alerting, and response. You receive a findings report: what was detected and when, where the gaps were, and prioritized recommendations to close them.
Much counter-UAS detection leans on radio frequency — listening for the link between a drone and its operator. It has a well-documented blind spot: a drone flying a pre-loaded, closed-loop mission with its radios quiet gives an RF system very little to hear. The forward answer is layered detection that doesn't depend on the aircraft broadcasting anything, acoustic sensing among them. We track and prototype in this space, so the assessment we hand you reflects where the threat is heading, not just where it was.
We don’t just track this space — we build in it. Our current prototype pairs low-cost acoustic sensing nodes with LoRa long-range radio, so distributed listeners can flag drone activity across a site and report it back with no Wi-Fi, cellular, or wired backhaul to defeat. It is early-stage, field-tested hardware — built to learn, honestly, what budget-realistic detection can and cannot hear.
That work feeds graduate research in aviation at Middle Tennessee State University focused on UAS safety and security management — including regulatory analysis of Part 107 operations and the FAA’s emerging Part 108 framework for beyond-visual-line-of-sight flight. It’s why an assessment from us reflects where policy and threat are heading, not just where they stand today.
We do not sell, operate, or provide drone-defeat, jamming, or interdiction equipment. In the United States, active counter-UAS mitigation is restricted by law to specific federal authorities. Our role is lawful threat emulation, assessment, and advisory — finding the gaps in your detection and response, not operating mitigation systems. Every engagement runs under our Safety Management System, under Part 107, with full coordination.