Drone jammers control the dangers in the air

Among all the notorious reports of drones and plane crashes, it is not surprising that another new technology made the headlines: “anti-drone” or “anti-drone” measures. “Drones”, the most important thing is that some criminals are using drones to do bad things and monitor people in real time.

The DroneGun tactical alarm jammer has successfully passed the French army’s DREP test to measure the electromagnetic radiation level of human users. In fact, as Bloomberg pointed out, this is not a weapon to be precise, but a drone, to be precise, HP 47 Counter drone jammer. It does not shoot the aircraft from the air: instead, it prevents remote control of it, keeps it floating in the air, and prevents images or videos from being returned to the owner.

It uses jamming signals from wifi signals to drones to prevent them from responding. Thermal imaging cameras allow Auds operators to target unwanted drones through high-power radio signals before the signal is activated.

The US government spent $17 billion to purchase 50,000 jamming units, including famous names such as Warlock Green, Warlock Red, Warlock Duke, and Acorn. However, at the beginning of the war, the firefighting game between RF interceptors and improvised explosive devices was far inferior to it. They are too slow to adapt well and can only provide protection within a few feet. Hell, sometimes the two mobile phone jammers will lock and cancel each other.

A new generation of UAV jammers was also introduced, which can cover a wide frequency range and perform specific “trigger” jamming, which means “Duke did not confuse the receiver with a modified version of its own signal.” A series of jamming Response “With the improvement of interference, Iraqi insurgents have basically given up the use of improvised explosive devices, and the death toll of direct investment foreigners has declined.