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China's top anti-drone jammer manufacturer
Drones are becoming a common part of modern airspace, but not all of them are welcome. From airports to military zones, concerts to critical infrastructure, drones can easily cross borders – intentionally or not. I’ve seen firsthand how quickly small drones can disrupt airspace or leak sensitive information. That’s why Counter-UAS technology is so important. It provides a structured approach to detecting, identifying, and intercepting drones before they can cause harm.
Counter-UAS technology is a complete solution that uses detection, tracking, jamming, deception, or destruction methods to counter drone threats. Many still believe that intercepting a drone is as simple as jamming its signal, but the reality is much more complicated than that. Let me walk you through how this technology works, what’s driving its development, where it can be used, and how the fate of the future of airspace depends on.
Drones may seem small, but they carry a huge risk. That’s why counter-drone systems are designed in layers. These systems are usually divided into two parts: a detection module and a response module. I have worked with both modules and witnessed that it first detects and identifies drones through radio, radar, visual and acoustic signals in a real-time environment. Then, it responds using jamming, deception or physical suppression.
Dive deeper: How detection and interference work together?
The first step is to find the drone. RF monitoring tools scan radio waves, especially around 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz. If they pick up signals between a drone and its controller, the software can usually identify the model of the drone and sometimes even the location of the drone pilot.
Next comes radar. Regular radars often can’t detect small, slow drones, but phased array radars and even quantum radars can track them more accurately. Quantum radars can improve detection range and sensitivity, even against stealth drones. I’ve also seen terahertz imaging used—it can read material signatures to distinguish between a drone, a bird, or debris.
Some units combine cameras and sound sensors. These can detect heat, shape, and sound at the same time. Italy’s KARMA system uses this combination. It relies on artificial intelligence to identify a flying object and determine whether it’s a bird or a drone—with a very low error rate.
Detection becomes even smarter when all the sensors communicate with each other in a network. Russia’s Repellent-1 system combines radar, RF tools, and cameras to smoothly move from detection to identification to jamming, all in seconds.
Once you’ve confirmed that a drone poses a threat, you need to take action. The most common method is jamming. This means sending a stronger signal to block communications between a drone and its pilot. China’s Keda jammer can intercept drones at 1,500 meters. In other cases, fake GPS signals trick drones into landing in the wrong place.
More advanced systems don’t just block commands, they take over the drone. These platforms decode the drone’s control language and send their own instructions. Some American systems can master more than 200 drone “languages.” They can instruct drones to land or fly in a safe place.
Meanwhile, some systems use energy rather than software. Laser systems burn out a drone’s electronics. High-power microwave (HPM) systems use electrical pulses to burn out circuits.
When a drone gets close, physical capture can help. I’ve seen nets fired from special rifles that can trap drones in mid-air. Other drones carry net guns or stun guns that can shoot down targets directly.
As drones get smarter, the tools used to stop them must also improve. This field is changing rapidly. Every year, new ideas emerge that push the limits of what’s possible. Because I’ve been involved in the counter-drone industry, I’ve watched this evolution up close and seen what works and what needs improvement.
Modern counter-drone systems are smarter, more precise, and more connected. They rely on artificial intelligence, mobile platforms, and layered defenses.
One of the biggest challenges is not a technical issue, but a legal one. Many countries restrict the use of jammers or lasers in civilian areas. In the European Union, for example, RF devices must comply with EU CE regulations to avoid harming nearby networks. Military tools like laser weapon systems (LaWS) are also beginning to appear at civilian airports, but are subject to strict restrictions.
Counter-drone systems are used in defense, civilian infrastructure, urban policing, and even space protection. But it’s important to note that counter-drone systems are not a one-size-fits-all tool. The risks faced by different places are also different. In my work, I have helped deploy these systems in a wide range of areas, from sports stadiums to military bases, and its application scenarios are constantly growing.
In addition, in emerging application areas, such as China’s deployment of vehicle-mounted mobile jamming platforms along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), dynamic monitoring of low-altitude targets is achieved. These breakthroughs indicate that anti-UAV technology is evolving from a single defense tool to a cross-domain, multi-dimensional global security solution.
The development of Counter-UAS Technology is a typical example of how drone threats force technological innovation. Although it currently faces challenges such as insufficient anti-interference capabilities, high costs, and ethical disputes, with breakthroughs in technologies such as AI, 5G, and lasers, as well as improved international cooperation and regulations, I believe that counter-UAS systems will evolve towards precision, low cost, and intelligence.