- Saildrone unveiled the Spectre unmanned surface vessel, 52 meters long and capable of 30 knots, at the Sea Air Space conference.
- The platform comes in two variants targeting anti-submarine warfare and kinetic strike missions, built on more than a decade of Saildrone operational experience.
California-based Saildrone has announced a new class of unmanned surface vessel called Spectre, a 52-meter (170-foot) platform capable of reaching speeds up to 30 knots and designed to deliver persistent anti-submarine warfare, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and strike capability to naval operations.
The announcement, made at the Sea Air Space conference, marks the most ambitious hardware reveal in the California-based company’s history.
The Spectre comes in two distinct variants, each optimized for a different mission profile. The first, dubbed Spectre Silent Endurance, retains the company’s signature wind-powered wing technology for extreme range and near-silent acoustic performance — a critical attribute for ASW missions where noise discipline can determine whether a submarine is detected or not. The second variant, Spectre Stealth Strike, drops the wing entirely in favor of a lower-profile hull form and higher sprint speeds, positioning it for kinetic strike roles. According to Saildrone, the Stealth Strike variant is specifically designed to meet medium unmanned surface vessel (mUSV) requirements at both threshold and desired performance levels.
Richard Jenkins, Saildrone’s founder and CEO, was direct about the development philosophy behind the platform. “Spectre is the result of 25 years of continually pushing the boundaries of what’s possible,” Jenkins said in the company’s official announcement. “A unique design evolved through the hard lessons of operational experience in the real world. Spectre is not a craft hurriedly readied to meet a particular RFP, but diligently evolved over multiple years to meet the operational requirements of our customers and fill critical capability gaps in the ASW domain.”

That emphasis on organic development rather than reactive contract-chasing is notable. Two years of formal design work underpins the platform, informed by more than a decade of Saildrone field operations — a body of experience the company says now totals over 2.5 million nautical miles sailed and 65,000 days at sea across its fleet of smaller autonomous vessels. In the world of maritime unmanned systems, that operational depth is unusual and gives the Spectre’s design lineage a credibility that paper concepts often lack.
Anti-submarine warfare is among the most technically demanding missions in naval operations. Detecting quiet modern submarines requires persistent presence over vast ocean areas, low acoustic signatures, and sophisticated sensor suites — all attributes that human-crewed surface ships struggle to maintain cost-effectively across extended deployments. A platform like the Spectre Silent Endurance, combining wind-assisted propulsion with autonomous operation, could theoretically sustain patrols over weeks or months without the logistical footprint and crew fatigue constraints that affect conventional warships. For a Navy grappling with rising submarine threats from peer competitors, that kind of persistent, affordable coverage represents a meaningful operational concept.

The strike variant addresses a different but equally pressing demand signal. The Pentagon has been pushing hard on the concept of attritable or expendable unmanned surface vessels capable of delivering lethal effects — effectively low-cost, distributed firepower that complicates adversary targeting calculus. Saildrone’s entry into that space, with the Stealth Strike variant, places the company in direct competition with a growing field of defense primes and startups all pursuing similar mUSV requirements.
Saildrone’s broader trajectory makes the Spectre announcement a natural progression rather than a pivot. The company first built its reputation on smaller wind-and-solar powered ocean drones used for meteorological and maritime domain awareness missions, often in partnership with NOAA and the Navy. Over time, it has steadily moved toward more defense-centric applications, winning contracts for maritime surveillance and working with the Navy’s Task Force 59 unmanned systems initiative in the Middle East region. The Spectre represents the logical endpoint of that arc — a full-scale combat-capable platform built on a foundation of real-world oceanic data collection and autonomous navigation experience.
With sea trials and further program details expected to follow the Sea Air Space reveal, the defense and naval communities will be watching closely to see how the Spectre performs when tested against the realities of blue-water operations.

