Skyranger 30


The Skyranger 30 is a short range air defence turret system developed by Rheinmetall Air Defence AG and first revealed in March 2021. Its role is to provide ground units with a mobile system capable of engaging fixed and rotary-wing aircraft, Group I and II unmanned aerial systems, loitering munitions and cruise missiles.

Development

Following the end of the Cold War, most Western land forces divested their mobile air defence assets. This caused a gap to appear which would leave them vulnerable as air threats returned in the early 21st century, as demonstrated during conflicts such as the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. To address this, Rheinmetall Air Defence developed the Skyranger 30 concept demonstrator and publicly displayed it in March 2021.
Starting in 2018, Rheinmetall Air Defence's product management department, under the leadership of Michael Gerber and Moritz Vischer, conceptually designed the Skyranger 30. An in-depth analysis by Moritz Vischer of ammunition effect, effective range, turret dimensions and cost was conducted and led to the finalization of the concept. By opting to use the 30mmx173 KCE revolver cannon, a lighter turret design compared to the Skyranger 35 turret was achievable. This allows for the integration of other air defence effectors such as SHORAD anti-aircraft missiles, high energy lasers or short range drone interceptors, thus creating a highly mobile hybrid air defence system. By including an AESA search radar into the turret structure and using a high-performance optical tracker all relevant air defence functions are combined in one unmanned turret.
The product management department spearheaded a small dedicated development team to produce a concept demonstrator. This Skyranger 30 A0 turret concept demonstrator was used from 2020 onward for development risk reduction and marketing activities. Michael Gerber's experience in the development of the Skyranger 35, the KDG revolver gun and the Millennium naval gun flowed into the general design of the Skyranger 30. Besides being a concept demonstrator, the Skyranger 30 A0 turret was also successfully used as a platform to combine and showcase Rheinmetall's full range of capabilities and products, Fast Infrared Search and Track Sensor ).
Due to the COVID pandemic, a live internet announcement event was conducted on December 16, 2020 to unveil the concept and turret. This was the first time such an event was used to unveil a major weapon system. At ILA 2022 Air Show in Berlin the Skyranger 30 A0 Turret was presented on a GTK Boxer.
In December 2023, the Skyranger 30A1 development testbed was tested in live-fire exercises at the Ochsenboden proving ground in stationary and mobile modes. Total system qualification of the Skyranger 30A3 version is expected in mid-2024.

Design

The Skyranger 30 follows the same general configuration as the Skyranger 35, a remote turret with a 1.414 m-diameter turret ring, but with less weight of 2-2.5 tonnes enabling it to be installed on lighter 6×6 wheeled vehicles. The system is designed to both be operated autonomously and in networked operations.

Armaments

Cannon

It is fitted with the Oerlikon KCE cannon, a modified version of the Oerlikon KCA 30 mm cannon used on the Saab 37 Viggen fighter jet. While it has a shorter effective range than the Skyranger 35 at 3 km, it has a higher rate of fire of 1,250 rounds per minute. It maintains the ability to elevate 85° to combat terminal diving targets.

Ammunition

The ammunition fired by the KCE cannon have a 30×173 mm calibre, and are of the airburst type with a time fuze.The turret carries 300 ready rounds which are based on the 35 mm AHEAD ammunition.
  • PMC308: This ammunition has 162 tungsten cylinders subprojectiles, they are the ones used on the Puma IFV. The ammunition carries a total of 201 grams of tungsten projectiles.
  • PMC455: A new ammunition with around 500 tungsten cylinders for the same total weight that is being developed.

    Missiles

Due to the system's reduced weight, the Skyranger 30 turret is able to integrate very short range missiles. The types of missiles are V/SHORAD, and have an infrared homing system or a laser beam riding system. From the variants unveiled, they can carry from 2 to 12 missiles.
Several options exist:
  • FIM-92 Stinger: The turret is equipped with a quad-launcher. It was selected by the Dutch Army.
  • Mistral-3: Renderings of this variant have shown both a dual and quad launchers. It was selected by Austrian Army, as it already operated this missile as a MANPADS. In March 2025, the Danish Army also selected this missile for its Skyranger 30.
  • SkyKnight: Among the variants presented by Rheinmetall Air Defence, one offers the missile of Halcon as an option. This missile is designed to engage large artillery shells and other form of guided munitions. As of early 2025, no client selected this missile.
  • MBDA DefendAir: The missile that was formerly known as the SADM is based on the MBDA Enforcer. Its range is about 5–6 km. This variant of the Skyranger 30 turret was presented at ILA Berlin Air Show 2024 by Rheinmetall Air Defence and MBDA Deutschland, with a launcher carrying 9 missiles. According to the information from the manufacturers, up to 12 missiles could be installed on the turret. It was selected by the German Army in May 2025, and the German Army will have 9 launchers per turret.

    Sensors

Radars

  • Rheinmetall Italia AMMR: It is an S-band AESA multi-mission radar. has a detection range of over 20 km for a 1 m2 RCS aircraft, 12 km against hovering helicopters, 10 km against missiles, and 5 km against RAM targets and micro-UAS. The first shown prototype turret had five flat antennas integrated around the turret provide full 360° coverage, although four would be enough as they each have 90° field of view. As of early 2025, this radar has not yet been selected to be used on the Skyranger 30.
  • Hensoldt Spexer 2000M 3D MkIII: It is an X-band AESA radar. The turret is equipped with three flat antennas that cover 360°. There is a smaller flat antenna on the front of the turret, presumably for target tracking. The SPEXER 2000M 3D MkIII radar's detection ranges: Light aircraft : 27 km; Low-level helicopter : 36 km; UAV : 9 km, Micro-UAV: 6 km. As of early 2025, this radar was selected to be used with the German, the Netherlands, the Austrian, the Hungarian and the Danish variants.

    Passive sensors

For passive detection, it is installed with Rheinmetall's FIRST, which is optimised to detect pop-up targets such as helicopters. The latest known version of the turret does not have the FIRST sensor. Identification and tracking is handled by a compact target tracker that includes one HD cooled MWIR thermal camera, one full-HD TV camera, and two laser rangefinders, one devoted to air targets and the other for land targets.

Laser range finder

A contract was signed with Lumibird Photonics Sweden AB in May 2025 for the supply of the Vidar laser range finder for the Skyranger 30 turret. The contract value amounts to €5 million, with deliveries from 2025 to 2028.

Gun stabilisation

Curtis Wright Switzerland signed a contract in September 2025 to supply the gyroscopes and the power management technology that will enable to control the turret.

Protection

The turret features a central armored structure with basic Level 2 protection, which can be fitted with add-on armor to increase to Level 4.
Additional features include two ROSY launchers each with nine multi-spectral smoke grenades, a hatch in the hull ceiling for the vehicle commander to view the battlefield from outside, and a coaxial machine gun fitted on the left of the main gun for use as a self-defence weapon. According to the released photos, both the hatch and the coaxial machine gun was omitted from the final production version of the turret.

Platforms

Future variants

  • Boxer: The German Army ordered 19 systems based on the Boxer.
  • Lynx: Hungary signed a contract with Rheinmetall in December 2023 to develop the Skyranger 30 based on the tracked platform. The Italian Army is also expected to order some Lynx equipped with the Skyranger 30 turret with the "Air Defence" variant.
  • Pandur 6×6: The Austrian Army ordered 36 Skyranger 30 in February 2024 with an option for 9 additional systems.
  • Piranha V: The Danish Army selected the Skyranger 30 system, and will equip it on their 8×8. During trials in Switzerland, Rheinmetall presented the variant on the Piranha V.
  • ACSV: The Netherlands Army selected the Skyranger 30 to be mounted on the ACSV.
  • Static: The Netherlands Army's variant of the Skyranger 30 can be used statically as well. It consists of a standard Skyranger 30 air defence turret  and a lower mount, which allows the system to be used mobile on an customer’s armoured combat support vehicle or to be operated stationary from the ground. In addition to the Skyranger weapon platforms, the dutch army has ordered tactical level control nodes and hooklift transport platforms for purely stationary deployment.

    Potential variants

  • M5 Ripsaw UGV: Rheinmetall presented a mock-up of the Skyranger turret on a Ripsaw unmanned vehicle in October 2023.
  • Pindad Badak: It was shown with a mock-up of the turret during 2022 Indonesian Defence Exposition & Forum.

    Future features

Electronic warfare

Additional add-ons are under consideration, including electronic warfare systems in the form of passive emitter locators to pick up UAV data link signals, as well as RF-jammers to jam such links to neutralize UAVs without using kinetic effectors.

High-energy laser

In late 2021, Rheinmetall unveiled the Skyranger 30 high-energy laser, intended to increase the system's ability to neutralize small targets at greater range and lower cost. The initial power level is 20 kW, with an immediate goal to increase it to 50 kW and an ideal goal of 100 kW.