9 Mothers
Austin counter-drone startup building AI point-defense to stop close-in FPV attack drones — shipping its first system to the US government and primes now.
9 Mothers is an Austin, Texas startup building AI counter-drone systems for the close-in fight that legacy air defence was never designed for. Its first system, the Edda point-defense turret, is already shipping to the US government and prime contractors, and the company is hiring hard across machine learning, computer vision, robotics and perception engineering — more than ten open roles in Austin at the time of writing.
The company’s framing is that the threat outran procurement. One-way FPV attack drones — assembled for a few hundred dollars, flown at 30 metres per second, used in volume — now account for much of the casualties in active war zones, yet conventional counter-UAS gear was engineered for large, slow, radio-dependent aircraft at kilometre ranges. 9 Mothers argues that equipment is too expensive, too heavy and too slow for an engagement that happens at fifty metres, and pitches itself as point defence priced for attrition and shipped on “software tempo” — hardware iterated in months rather than a decade-long acquisition cycle.
Its roadmap is a four-part kill chain. Edda, the AI turret, is in service now; a passive acoustic sensor called Vor and a belt-fed shotgun system called Atla are slated for early 2027, with a fourth system to follow. Detection is deliberately passive — coarse acoustic cueing from a drone’s own sound, refined by an onboard visual model — so the system can see incoming drones without emitting a radio signature that gives away its position.
Founding details, funding and leadership are not yet public. What is visible is a company betting that counter-drone defence has to be cheap, fast and close-range, and building the engineering team to ship it quickly.
- Stack
- computer-vision
- onboard-perception
- robotics
- embedded
- Collaboration
- us-government
Products
Hardware
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Vor
Passive acoustic sensor — zero-RF, signature-quiet detection that coarse-tracks drones from their own sound and feeds the rest of the kill chain. Slated for Q1 2027.
Integrated systems
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Edda
AI-powered point-defense turret that detects and engages fast 7-inch FPV drones at 10–100+ m using passive acoustic cueing, an onboard visual model and a shotgun effector. Shipping now.
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Edda
AI point-defense turret built to stop multiple fast FPV drones at 10–100 m.
Introduced 2026
Weapons
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Atla
Belt-fed shotgun system for continuous close-range fire against sustained drone swarms, where ammunition discipline can't be the limit. Slated for Q1 2027.
Sources
- 9mothers.com/ (2026-06-23) — 9 Mothers homepage — AI mission systems, Austin TX; "four systems, one kill chain" (Edda shipping now; Vor and Atla Q1 2027; fourth system 2027); US government and primes buying now.
- 9mothers.com/company (2026-06-23) — Company page — counter-drone systems built "on software tempo"; threat/procurement-gap thesis; Austin-built.
- 9mothers.com/edda (2026-06-23) — Edda product page — AI point-defense turret; passive acoustic + onboard visual model detection, zero RF, optional active radar; engagement 5°/<15 ms/1.5 arcmin with shotgun effector at 10–100 m.