No verified Aeroprobe deployments or case studies documented
Aeroprobe's complete absence of verified deployments, customer references, or public program wins raises red flags for defense supply chain evaluation despite claimed certifications.
- Zero verified deployments Public customer references No SBIR awards, integrator partnerships, or program office references found
- ISO 9001:2015 certified Quality certification MIL-STD compliance claimed but unverified in public sources
- March 2026 Only verifiable third-party mention Silver-tier listing in Unmanned Systems Technology ecosystem directory
- Products
- Micro Air Data Computers, multi-function air data probes, Pitot probes, Total Air Temperature probes
- Certifications
- ISO 9001:2015, MIL-STD compliance
- Market segment
- Air data and flow measurement systems for UAVs and autonomous flight operations
Aeroprobe’s Complete Public Absence Is the Signal, Not a Gap in Coverage
A company manufacturing air data systems for autonomous UAVs that cannot be verified through a single customer deployment, program win, or product datasheet in public sources is not merely obscure — it is operationally unconfirmable, and that distinction matters for anyone evaluating it as a supplier, partner, or investment target.
Aeroprobe produces Micro Air Data Computers, multi-function air data probes, Pitot probes, and Total Air Temperature probes, and holds ISO 9001:2015 certification with MIL-STD compliance — credentials that, in aerospace and defense supply chains, typically generate a traceable paper trail of qualification events, SBIR/STTR awards, or at minimum OEM integration announcements. None of that trail exists in available sources. The company does not appear in the Research and Markets 2026 AMR vendor landscape, which profiles 12 named platform integrators including OMRON, Boston Dynamics, and GreyOrange across a market valued at $6.83B. Its March 2026 addition as a Silver-tier supplier to the Unmanned Systems Technology ecosystem directory is the only verifiable third-party mention — a listing-level entry that confirms existence, not traction.
The defense sector context makes this absence more notable, not less. AviationOutlook’s 2025 aerospace industry outlook identifies ISR, loyal wingman, and swarm programs as active demand drivers for high-reliability sensing components — exactly the product category Aeroprobe nominally occupies. DoD-adjacent component suppliers in this space typically accumulate at least one public signal of government engagement within a 24-month window: a SBIR Phase II award, a named integrator partnership, or a program office reference. Aeroprobe has generated none of those signals. With no executive team on record, no financial disclosures, and no customer references, the company’s moat rating of NARROW is generous — it assumes IP and certification barriers that cannot currently be verified. Consolidation pressure from Tier 1 primes expanding via M&A, flagged by AviationOutlook 2025, poses an additional structural risk to any standalone component supplier that has not yet demonstrated design-in wins.
BOTTOM LINE
Defense procurement officers, system integrators, and investors should treat Aeroprobe as requiring full primary diligence — direct customer reference checks, product certification documentation, and financial disclosure — before any contractual or capital commitment, because no secondary source currently supports any element of the investment or supplier thesis.
Confidence: HIGH — The absence of deployments, financials, leadership data, and product specifications is consistent and corroborated across multiple independent 2026 industry sources, making the evidentiary gap itself a high-confidence finding rather than an artifact of incomplete research.
Sources: Research and Markets 2026 AMR Market Report; AviationOutlook Global Aerospace Industry Outlook 2025; Unmanned Systems Technology supplier directory, March 2026; Cognitive Market Research 2026 AMR Analysis.
Signal Activity — Aeroprobe
Competitive Positioning — Aeroprobe