Kodiak Launches its First Autonomous Military Prototype Vehicle

It's a Ford F-150 upfitted with Kodiak's autonomous system.

Kodiak Defense 1
Kodiak

Kodiak Robotics, a self-driving technology developer for the trucking and defense markets, today unveiled its first autonomous test vehicle designed specifically for the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). This vehicle is a Ford F-150 upfitted with Kodiak's autonomous system, the Kodiak Driver, and contains both the autonomy hardware and software required to operate a military ground vehicle. The Kodiak Driver-equipped vehicle is designed to handle complex military environments, diverse operational conditions, and areas with degraded GPS, as well as off-road variables like rocks, dust, mud, and water. The Kodiak Driver also provides the Army the ability to remotely operate vehicles when necessary.

Kodiak demonstrated the portability of the Kodiak Driver by integrating it into a new vehicle in less than six months. This rapid development is possible due to the versatility of Kodiak's modular and vehicle-agnostic autonomous system. The vehicle runs the same software as Kodiak's autonomous long-haul trucks, and features Kodiak DefensePods, an adapted version of Kodiak's modular, swappable SensorPods, designed for defense applications. A technician can swap out a DefensePod in the field in 10 minutes or less, with no specialized training required.

In December 2022, Kodiak announced contract award with options up to $50 Million with the U.S. Department of Defense, specifically Defense Innovation Unit in support of the U.S. Army to develop demonstrator prototype autonomous ground vehicles. As part of this contract, Kodiak designed its vehicle in line with the Army's Product Manager Robotic Combat Vehicle program's unique Software Acquisition Pathways strategy. The Software Acquisition Pathways strategy allows the DoD to acquire hardware and software solutions separately, to ensure that DoD gets the best possible combination of hardware and software for persistent modernization.

As part of this program, Kodiak will build and deliver two off-road-capable vehicles based on the Ford F-150 vehicle. Kodiak began testing the vehicles at a U.S. military base this November 2023. Once the testing is successfully completed, Kodiak plans to put its autonomous system into a purpose-built ground reconnaissance vehicle for military use.

Prior to testing the F-150 vehicles, Kodiak used its semi-trucks to test its autonomous system in off-road environments. Testing the Kodiak Driver in off-road environments also helps Kodiak improve its on-road long-haul trucking technology. For example, testing on off road terrain has helped Kodiak further harden its hardware platform while improving the Kodiak Driver's handling of dust, rocks, and other small obstacles.

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