Crusher
'Crusher' uses a six-wheel drive and advanced processing to navigate terrain

Carnegie Mellon to build military robot

University wins $14m contract for autonomous vehicle

Written by Iain Thomson

The National Robotics Engineering Center (NREC) at Carnegie Mellon has been awarded a $14.4m contract to build a fully autonomous battlefield robot for the US Army.

The money will be spent on updating an existing 6.5-ton unmanned ground vehicle, nicknamed Crusher, that uses a six-wheel drive and advanced processing to navigate difficult terrain.

The contract comes just a month after the Carnegie Mellon Tartan Racing team won first place in the Darpa Urban Challenge.

"We are delighted that NREC will play a key role in showing how advanced autonomous vehicles work in future combat systems settings," said NREC director John Bares.

"Our goal will be to develop, integrate and test a high-performance unmanned ground vehicle with the most up-to-date mobility and autonomy technologies."

The NREC team will also further improve the vehicle's software to include manoeuvring capabilities in combat and integrate the vehicle into existing military organisations.

Armies around the world are increasingly looking to robotic troops to cut deaths in combat.

The US Army already uses automatic aerial drones, anti-sniper robots and wireless gun platforms in combat and wants a quarter of its transport division automated by 2030.

Tags:

Further reading

Robocop hits the streets

Taser-equipped robots to enforce the law   More...

Boeing develops next-gen military robot

Small unmanned ground vehicle heading for Iraq   More...

British soldiers stay cool on the battlefield

New cooling vests could cut deaths   More...

Robo-cars gear up for Darpa challenge

Get your modem running …   More...

Related articles

Carnegie Mellon wins Darpa Urban Challenge

Tartan Racing team scoops $2m prize   More...

Cars line up for Darpa Urban Challenge

Corporates muscle in on competition   More...

Darpa eliminates 14 Urban Challenge teams

Final testing shows some serious kinks   More...

DARPA finalises urban challenge contestants

Software-driven cars could be in your city soon   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

16 May 2008

2.97 MBXP on OLPC, broken dreams and Yahoo fights back More...

15 May 2008

3.28 MBDark fibre, mobile TV and solar power More...

14 May 2008

2.66 MBOnline inequality, mobile thumbprints and corporate raids More...

Poll

HOME WORKING

HOME WORKING

Do you let any or all of your employees work from home?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

OLPC

OLPC to ship with Windows XP

Microsoft teams up with One Laptop per Child project   More...

The Sims

The Sims goes flat-pack with Ikea

Virtual world gets Swedish wood   More...

Advertisement

Microsoft-Yahoo

Yahoo board fights back at Icahn

Investor accused of 'significant misunderstanding' in Microsoft saga   More...

MySpace

Woman charged over MySpace suicide

Lori Drew indicted on federal charges   More...

Advertisement