A new standard for unmanned surface vehicles,
the Guardian shows you.
It was designed to be the most stable platform in harsh sea environments to carry out multi-purpose missions.
Guardian chose a design that allows for stable operation in the form of a catamaran that is resistant to waves, which is the most problematic issue for unmanned surface vehicles. Additionally, these platforms enable unmanned surface vehicles to perform various missions by being equipped with various sensors such as multibeam, single beam, side scan sonar, ADCP, and CTD.
These stable platforms move along a path to acquire underwater multi-beam data or move to a specific point, enabling precise surveying with very high positioning accuracy.
Unmanned Surface Vehicles should operate until their mission is complete.
Guardian was designed with the basic concept of long-distance and long-duration operation. It was built to be able to perform long-term missions by adding a sturdy hull that can withstand rough waves for a long time and a battery pack depending on the nature of the mission.
This performance allows the Guardian to perform coastal surveillance and reconnaissance missions, and can be mounted on a mother ship to conduct surveillance and reconnaissance over a wider area.
Unmanned Surface Vehicles can launch missions from anywhere.
Guardian is easy to disassemble and assemble, so it can be loaded onto a small pickup truck and transported to a desired area, and can be launched and recovered in various environments, such as the coast or port slipway.
This allows quick search & rescue missions within golden time when searching for missing persons is required in reservoirs, rivers, coasts, etc.