Key Points
- Aurelius Systems displayed its Archimedes autonomous directed energy counter-drone system on a robotic combat vehicle at Reindustrialize 2026 in Detroit on June 16-17.
- The display was mounted in partnership with American Rheinmetall and Harbinger, combining defense manufacturing expertise with electric vehicle powertrain technology.
A robotic combat vehicle carrying an autonomous laser weapon system designed to shoot down drones rolled onto the floor of a Detroit manufacturing conference this week, placing one of the most futuristic weapons concepts in modern defense squarely in the middle of America’s industrial heartland.
Aurelius Systems, a defense technology company developing autonomous directed energy weapons, showcased its Archimedes system integrated onto a robotic combat vehicle at Reindustrialize 2026, a manufacturing and industrial innovation conference held at Hudson’s Detroit on June 16 and 17, 2026. The display was mounted in partnership with American Rheinmetall, the U.S. subsidiary of Germany’s Rheinmetall AG, one of Europe’s largest defense and automotive industrial conglomerates.
The combination of a German-American defense giant, a Silicon Valley-style EV startup, and a directed energy weapons developer on a single exhibit floor in Detroit is a striking snapshot of where American defense manufacturing is trying to go and how quickly the boundaries between commercial technology and military capability are dissolving.
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The company describes the Archimedes system as “Autonomous Directed Energy for the Next Generation of Defense.” Directed energy weapons, the category that includes laser systems capable of burning through drone airframes, blinding optical sensors, or detonating explosive payloads at the speed of light, have been a military research priority for decades but have only recently reached the maturity level where fielded systems are practical and affordable enough to compete with conventional kinetic interceptors in real operational environments. The United States, United Kingdom, Israel, and China have all fielded or demonstrated operational laser weapons in recent years, with the U.S. Navy’s HELIOS system aboard USS Portland and the Army’s SHORAD directed energy programs representing the leading edge of American military deployment.
The Archimedes system, based on the banner visible at the display, emphasizes machine vision and radar systems that identify and track targets without human initiation of each engagement, an architecture that allows the weapon to respond to drone threats at the speed the threat requires rather than the speed a human operator can process and react.
Small commercial drones flying at speeds of 100 kilometers per hour (62 miles per hour) or faster and approaching from multiple directions simultaneously present a targeting problem that human operators struggle to solve in real time, which is exactly the scenario that autonomous engagement logic is designed to address. The banner visible at the Reindustrialize display explicitly lists modular power interfacing, lethal precision with near-instant response times, advanced sensing combining machine vision and radar, and complete 360-degree coverage as the system’s core capability pillars.
Specific performance parameters for the Archimedes system including laser power output, effective engagement range, and the vehicle platform’s weight and dimensions were not disclosed in the information available from the Reindustrialize display. What the exhibition confirms is that Aurelius Systems has moved beyond laboratory demonstration to a physically integrated, vehicle-mounted system capable of public display at a major industrial conference, a meaningful step toward the customer demonstrations and procurement conversations that precede military contracts.
