U.S. Army service
Designated
XM156 (or
Class I) by the United States Army, the aircraft was intended to provide the dismounted soldier with reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition (
RSTA) and laser designation. Total system weight, which includes the air vehicle, a control device, and ground support equipment is less than and is back-packable in two custom
MOLLE-type carriers. This
micro air vehicle operates in open, rolling, complex and urban terrains with a
vertical take-off and landing capability. It was interoperable with select ground and air platforms and controlled by mounted or dismounted soldiers. The Class I used autonomous flight and navigation, but it would interact with the network and soldier to dynamically update routes and target information. It provided dedicated reconnaissance support and early warning to the smallest echelons of the
brigade combat team (BCT) in environments not suited to larger assets. The Class I system provided a hover and stare capability that was not available in the Army UAV inventory for urban and route surveillance. The Class I system also filled known gaps that existed in force operations, such as: protect force in counterinsurgency (
COIN) operations, soldier protection in COIN environment, ability to conduct joint urban operations, enhanced
ISR/RSTA capabilities, hover and stare operations. The Class I UAV was part of Spin Out 1 and entered evaluation by soldiers at the Army Evaluation Task Force (AETF). It was to be fielded to
infantry brigade combat teams (IBCT) starting in 2011. However, the Army issued Honeywell a stop-work order on January 6, 2011, with formal termination on February 3 the following month. Its role has gone to the
Puma AE. ==Continued service==