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German company that already supplies Ukraine with drones has unveiled Shahed-hunter aircraft with four weapons categories on single airframe

11 June 2026 at 18:41

Render of the Pulse P19 multi-purpose optionally piloted aircraft. Source: Quantum Systems

Germany's Quantum Systems has unveiled the Pulse P19, an optionally-piloted aircraft designed to hunt drones and repel massed drone attacks, per Defense Express. The technology company already supplies Vector reconnaissance drones to Ukraine. 

The Pulse P19's primary mission profile, which is hunting drones and repelling massed drone attacks, addresses exactly the Russian Shahed threat that Ukraine has been responding to.

Ukraine is now intercepting 95% of incoming Russian Shaheds, using a layered defense system that includes Patriot, NASAMS, IRIS-T, naval-platform interceptors, helicopter-based interceptors, Ukrainian-made Bullet interceptors, and autonomous drone-on-drone systems.

The Pulse P19 would add a dedicated, optionally piloted drone-hunter platform to this layered defense,  though the aircraft is currently in early design stages, with only renders released.

What does Pulse P19 carry, and how would it hunt? 

For air-target detection and tracking, the Pulse P19 can be equipped with an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar and an electro-optical targeting station.

The aircraft's armament options are unusually broad. The Pulse P19 is designed to carry interceptor drones, loitering munitions, missiles with semi-active laser homing heads (APKWS class), pod-mounted machine guns, and additional weapons that may be developed in the future.

The interceptor drones referenced in the Quantum Systems presentation are likely the same systems being integrated onto the Airbus U145 helicopter, which Quantum Systems also unveiled at ILA Berlin 2026 with anti-drone armament.

Specifications: small, fast, with significant payload

The Pulse P19 has a maximum speed of 556 km/h and a service ceiling of 7,620 meters. The aircraft's empty weight is approximately 1,700 kg, while it can carry up to 2,500 kg of payload and armament.

The payload-to-empty-weight ratio is unusually high. This indicates the design is built around the requirement to carry multiple weapons systems simultaneously. The 556 km/h maximum speed places the Pulse P19 in the slow-to-mid-tier of fixed-wing combat aircraft, but adequate for the Shahed-pursuit mission, given that Shahed-136 drones typically cruise at 180 km/h.

Development status: renders only, timeline undisclosed

Quantum Systems has presented only renders of the Pulse P19. The project's development stage has not been disclosed. The aircraft is likely still in early design phases. No first-flight timeline has been published.

The aircraft's specifications and weapons configuration represent design intent rather than current operational capability. Ukrainian defense procurement officials would likely engage with Quantum Systems on the Pulse P19 trajectory once the aircraft reaches the flight-test stage, given Quantum Systems' established relationship with Ukraine and the operational fit between the Pulse P19's mission profile and Ukraine's defensive needs.

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