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BlueWavePsych

(3,423 posts)
Sun May 3, 2026, 05:39 PM Sunday

Japan is building military drones out of cardboard, and they're faster and cheaper than you'd expect

Cardboard drones that cost $3,000 and take five minutes to assemble could change how wars are fought

The conflicts in Ukraine and Iran have revealed a hard lesson for modern militaries: cheap, expendable drones deployed at scale can be just as strategically valuable as expensive precision weapons. A Japanese startup is now pushing that logic further, swapping composite airframes for something far more humble – cardboard.

Japan's defense ministry recently sat down with Air Kamuy, a drone manufacturer whose signature design relies on corrugated cardboard construction. The meeting signals Tokyo's broader ambition to carve out a leadership role in low-cost drone production as mass-market models reshape the calculus of modern warfare.

https://www.techspot.com/news/112274-japan-building-military-drones-out-cardboard-theyre-faster.html

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NoMoreRepugs

(12,200 posts)
2. So with a $1.5TRILLION military budget we could have a hundred Kazillion of these to use everywhere on the planet???
Sun May 3, 2026, 06:03 PM
Sunday

Emrys

(9,195 posts)
6. An Australian firm developed cardboard drones in 2022, and they've been used in the Ukraine-Russia conflict
Sun May 3, 2026, 06:49 PM
Sunday
The Aussie cardboard drones hitting Russia in massed attacks

Dubbed the “origami of death”, Melbourne-made flatpack drones assembled with glue and rubber bands have been hitting targets inside Russia since June, most recently destroying US$100 million worth of aircraft.

Family-owned Australian company SYPAQ Systems has been sending 100 cardboard drones a month to Ukraine for the last year. Designed to carry more benign payloads, some have been hitting deep inside Russia loaded with explosives.

The cardboard Corvo drone takes an hour to assemble with glue and rubber-bands. The “Precision Payload Delivery System” is backed with sophisticated software and has been donated to Ukraine by the Australian government.

The Corvo, designed to carry 3kg payloads up to 120km can still fly with loads up to 5kg. “I call it a flying shoebox,” company founder George Vicino told the Build it. They ‘ll Come podcast. “Whatever you can fit in a shoebox you can get it to people 120 km away.”

The Corvo, reported to cost between $1,000 and $5,000 apiece, is made from waxed cardboard and uses off-the-shelf hardware, including an Android tablet for the pilot. One bolt is required – for the propeller.

The Corvo cardboard drone is designed and priced to be expendable, but the waxed cardboard is waterproof, so it can be reused up to 60 times.

https://www.forbes.com.au/covers/innovation/the-aussie-cardboard-drones-hitting-russia-in-massed-attacks/

PufPuf23

(9,918 posts)
7. Wonder if a cardboard drone is less "visible" to radar and interceptors than a traditional drone?
Sun May 3, 2026, 08:19 PM
Sunday

Not only cheap, low tech and simple to assemble and operate, but sneaky in approaching the target.

Assume a normal zone is made of metals and plastic.

canetoad

(20,931 posts)
8. trump's probably got a team
Sun May 3, 2026, 09:17 PM
Sunday

Investigating whether drones can be built out of the Epstein files.

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