Meanwhile, Pavlovskyi had been working on a far simpler device. Initially, he dismissed it as unpromising, but this cost-effective device is now in use against Russian reconnaissance and FPV drones as well as ambush UAVs – those the Russians leave on standby along roads, waiting for targets.
The product, called Aero Trawl, does more than shoot down Russian UAVs – it enables their capture and transfer to Ukrainian intelligence.
It’s a net. They zip tie a net to a drone. It costs about $18.50.
There’s a similar niche of products that shoot nets down below. That way you can carry several charges but can’t transport captured drones, unless you’ve got someone on the ground.
That’s pretty slick! Cheap too so will definitely be a boon.
They need to mass produce it before it can be a boon.all the while hoping there isn’t a counter developed. I wish them luck ot this hard problem
Can’t counter physics I’m afraid. Kinetic interception is the drone endgame



