US company expands drone production at home with Alabama facility

The unmistakable buzz of personal drones has become a familiar sound across the United States. Over the past decade, their presence surged, with nearly 1 million drones registered for commercial and recreational use.
According to the Federal Aviation Administration, 822,039 drones were registered nationwide, used by hobbyists, content creators, news organizations and more.
An innovation from the trenches of Ukraine
The role of drones shifted dramatically following Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. The conflict demonstrated the effectiveness of small, agile and affordable unmanned aerial systems (UAS) in combat. For more than three years, U.S. military leaders and defense entrepreneurs explored ways to equip American troops with similar technology.
Despite growing interest, supply posed a challenge. An estimated 80% of drones operating in the U.S. originated from China, raising concerns among defense officials.
Performance Drone Works
Performance Drone Works (PDW), an American drone manufacturer, responded by opening a new 90,000-square-foot facility in Huntsville, Alabama. The site, named Drone Factory 01 (DF01), aimed to accelerate the development and production of PDW’s C100 multi-mission UAS and AM-FPV attritable munition to meet Pentagon demand.
“There is a massive generational change occurring on the battlefield,” said Ryan Gury, PDW’s CEO and co-founder. “Legacy U.S. primes cannot win today’s wars. There is a shift toward attritable robotics, which is what we specialize in.”
Gury explained that commercial technologies have matured to the point where they can be used to develop scalable weapons systems.
“Now, 70 to 80% of all strikes are delivered by drones the size of a dinner plate, using parts from Amazon and Alibaba,” he said. “They outperform legacy systems like the Switchblade.”
Scaling up for the future
PDW designed DF01 to produce up to 60,000 drones per month. Gury said the company envisions additional facilities in the future.
“We called it Drone Factory 01 to imply there will be another,” he said. “We believe the front lines need an arsenal of small robotics.”
Gury emphasized the need to move away from costly, complex systems.
“We want to see a marketplace where users can rate, buy and choose what they want,” he said. “We want to remove red tape and long acquisition programs.”
Why Huntsville?
PDW chose Huntsville for its rich history in missile production and rocketry, as well as its proximity to military facilities.
“We started the company in Manhattan, which was not ideal for a defense firm,” Gury said. “Huntsville was perfect. We found big fields to fly, strong community support and cost efficiency.”
According to PDW’s press release, DF01 will create more than 500 jobs in the greater Huntsville area and generate an annual economic impact of over $81 million.
Access the full Weapons and Warfare episode here.
The post US company expands drone production at home with Alabama facility appeared first on Straight Arrow News.