Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Right Gun for the Drone Age


Rethinking Naval Medium-Caliber Armament

Stephen L Pendergast LT USNR

Seventy-five years of procurement choices have left the surface fleet with a gap precisely where the drone swarm threat lands hardest — between Phalanx's two-kilometer wall and the unaffordable economics of the vertical launch system. Closing it requires confronting decisions that were made with a different threat in mind.

The U.S. Navy enters the drone age with a critical gap in its surface combatant gun armament: no fielded medium-caliber weapon combines the rate of fire, programmable proximity fuzing, and pre-fragmented warhead technology required to engage drone swarms at acceptable cost. The Mk 45 5-inch gun — the primary weapon of the Arleigh Burke fleet — fires 16–20 rounds per minute against a threat environment that demands hundreds. The Phalanx CIWS reaches only two kilometers. Between those layers, the Navy relies on vertical launch system missiles costing $450,000 to $4.2 million per shot against targets costing $20,000 to $40,000. The BAE Systems Bofors Mk110 57mm gun firing the six-mode programmable, proximity-fused 3P round — already in service on Littoral Combat Ships and designated for the cancelled FFG-62 and its NSC-derived FF(X) replacement — fills this gap at approximately $27 per round for the 40mm variant. It is not on the ships doing the most fighting. The Arleigh Burke class, carrying the combat load in the Red Sea and expected to escort amphibious ready groups into the contested littoral, carries neither the Mk110 nor any equivalent. Correcting this mismatch is an urgent warfighting requirement, not a future acquisition aspiration. The path runs through containerized solutions now and a fundamental rethink of medium-caliber armament philosophy for the next destroyer design cycle.

The Navy has fought with the guns it has. In the Red Sea, destroyers armed with the Mk 45 5-inch gun and Phalanx CIWS have engaged Houthi one-way attack drones — and done so at a cost that the Secretary of the Navy described publicly as not sustainable. Understanding why requires going back to a fundamental mismatch between threat economics and weapon economics that postwar procurement systematically created.

The Historical Arc: How We Got Here

The Pacific War bequeathed to the U.S. Navy a coherent layered anti-aircraft architecture built around complementary gun calibers. The 5-inch/38 dual-purpose gun, fitted with the Variable Time (VT) proximity fuze beginning in 1943, provided medium-range anti-aircraft fire that was, by war's end, devastating against Japanese aircraft. The Bofors 40mm gun — firing at rates of 120 rounds per minute in twin and quad mounts — provided the intermediate layer. The 20mm Oerlikon covered the close-in zone. Every major combatant from destroyer to battleship carried all three layers.

The VT fuze, developed at Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory under physicist Merle Tuve and requiring nearly a year of work by James Van Allen to make five miniaturized vacuum tubes survive 20,000g setback and 28,000 rpm spin inside a 5-inch shell, gave the medium-caliber layer its decisive edge. By 1943, VT-fuzed shells representing 25 percent of anti-aircraft ammunition accounted for 51 percent of Japanese aircraft kills — roughly three times the effectiveness per round of conventional timed fuzes. A proximity fuze that detonates when the shell passes near its target is simply more lethal than one that requires a direct hit on a fast-moving, maneuvering aircraft. That principle has not changed. The aircraft have gotten smaller, cheaper, and more numerous.

What changed was the postwar procurement philosophy. Guided missiles made the layered gun architecture seem obsolete by offering engagement at ranges guns could not reach, against targets moving too fast for optically-directed gun fire. The RIM-2 Terrier, RIM-8 Talos, and RIM-24 Tartar replaced the 5-inch and 40mm as the primary anti-aircraft weapons of the fleet. The introduction of the Mk 41 Vertical Launch System and the Standard Missile family completed the transformation. The Bofors 40mm batteries that had filled the middle layer of Pacific War air defense disappeared from U.S. warships. The Phalanx CIWS, introduced in the 1980s as a last-ditch close-in weapon, provided a terminal gun layer but at only 20mm caliber and approximately two kilometers of effective range. Between Phalanx and the VLS cells, the Navy left an engagement band empty.

This was a rational choice given the threat of the 1970s through 2010s: high-speed aircraft, cruise missiles, and ballistic reentry vehicles that missiles were better suited to engage than guns. What was not anticipated was the emergence of a low-cost, low-speed, high-volume threat — the mass-produced drone — that would attack in the specific altitude and range band where the Navy's gun layers are either absent or economically ruinous to engage with missiles.

The Red Sea Ledger: An Unsustainable Exchange

Beginning in October 2023, Houthi forces in Yemen launched sustained one-way attack drone and cruise missile campaigns against commercial shipping and U.S. Navy vessels in the Red Sea. By April 2024, Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro stated publicly that the cost of Navy intercepts had approached one billion dollars. Vice Admiral Brendan McLane, Commander of Naval Surface Forces, specifically cited USS O'Kane as having protected a merchant convoy against hostile UAVs by employing its 5-inch gun — an endorsement of the gun's utility, but also an implicit acknowledgment that VLS missiles were too expensive a solution for the problem.

The mathematics are not kind. The Shahed-136 one-way attack drone, manufactured by Iran and deployed in large numbers by Russia against Ukraine and by Houthi forces against Red Sea shipping, costs an estimated $35,000 per unit at the median of published intelligence estimates, with some production-era estimates as low as $20,000. Against it, the Navy has routinely expended Evolved Sea Sparrow Missiles at approximately $400,000 per round, Standard Missile 2 rounds at approximately $2 million each, and Patriot PAC-3 rounds at approximately $4.2 million. The SM-6, used for terminal defense against ballistic threats, runs to approximately $4.3 million per round.

The production rate asymmetry compounds the cost problem. Patriot PAC-3 interceptors are manufactured at approximately 650–740 rounds per year globally, shared across all allied operators. Russia was producing Shahed-type drones at rates reaching 125–300 per day by mid-2025, with China simultaneously reporting orders approaching one million kamikaze drones for near-term delivery. Producing one thousand high-reliability interceptors per month, as the Center for a New American Security's September 2025 "Countering the Swarm" study observed, is not a winning strategy against an adversary generating five thousand drone sorties in the same period. The economic model of guided missile air defense — premised on a world where the defender's interceptor is cheaper than the attacker's weapon — has been inverted.

"Our small surface combatant inventory is a third of what we need. We need more capable blue water, small combatants to close the gap and keep our DDGs focused on the high-end fight."

Admiral Daryl Caudle, Chief of Naval Operations — Surface Navy Association Symposium, January 2026

What the Right Gun Looks Like: The 3P Standard

The engineering solution exists and is in production. The Bofors 3P (Pre-fragmented, Programmable, Proximity-fused) round, manufactured by BAE Systems in 40mm and 57mm calibers for the Bofors Mk4 and Mk3 gun families respectively, addresses the drone swarm problem on the correct terms: high rate of fire, low cost per round, and a fuzing system that does not require a direct hit on a target that a gunfire control system cannot guarantee it will hit.

The 57mm round as fired from the Mk110 carries 2,400 pre-fragmented titanium pellets in a 975-gram projectile with 120 grams of Octol explosive. The fuze is programmed individually for each round while it is still in the breech, in two steps: a DC initialization followed by a high-frequency data transmission in the milliseconds before firing. The fire control computer sets one of six modes — gated proximity, proximity, pre-set proximity, time, impact, or delay — based on continuous target track data. In gated proximity mode, the fuze detects a target within a narrow solid angle around the projectile's flight axis and detonates at 8–12 meters standoff distance; the gating rejects sea and ground clutter that would cause false detonation in a simpler omnidirectional proximity sensor. The round self-destructs if no target is detected, preventing unexploded ordnance from reaching friendly ships or civilian areas. The system is ECM-immune by design. The 40mm variant costs approximately $27 per round; the 57mm significantly more, but still measured in hundreds of dollars rather than hundreds of thousands.

This is not a developmental concept. The Mk110 57mm system, designated internationally as the Bofors 57 Mk3, is in service with the navies and coast guards of eight nations: Sweden (Visby-class corvettes, the platform for which the Mk3 was originally designed in 1995), the United States (LCS Freedom and Independence classes; USCG National Security Cutters and Offshore Patrol Cutters), Canada (Halifax class), Finland, Germany, the United Kingdom (Royal Navy Type 31 frigates currently under construction), and others. The 3P round is designated Mark 295 Mod 0 in U.S. service. BAE Systems received a $26 million contract from NAVSEA to equip Constellation-class frigates with the Mk110 before that program's cancellation.

The 40mm Bofors Mk4 system, firing the same 3P round family, is deployed on Swedish and Finnish naval vessels and in the truck-mounted Tridon Mk2 land configuration, which was deployed to Ukraine for counter-drone operations against Russian Shahed drones in 2024–25. A 2025 analysis calculated a cost-per-kill ratio for the Tridon Mk2 approximately 185 times more favorable than a Patriot intercept against the same Shahed threat category. BAE Systems introduced the Bofors 40 Mk4 to the U.S. market for the first time at Sea Air Space 2025, pitching containerized and palletized naval configurations for the gap on U.S. surface combatants.

The Platform Mismatch: Right Gun, Wrong Ships

The Mk110 is on the ships least likely to fight. The ships most likely to fight lack it entirely.

The Littoral Combat Ship — the platform on which the Mk110 was fielded — was conceived as the littoral warfighter, the ship that would operate close to shore against the asymmetric threats of mine countermeasures, fast-attack craft, and submarine hunting in the shallow water zone. Whatever its other failures, the LCS had the right gun for the drone age built in from the start. The program's execution, however, proved catastrophic: propulsion casualties, gearbox failures, structural cracking in Independence-class aluminum trimarans, mission module packages that never achieved operational maturity, and a survivability assessment that the Navy's own analysis concluded was inadequate for contested littoral operations. The Navy began pushing for early LCS retirements; the program that had the right gun is being walked off the stage.

The Arleigh Burke guided-missile destroyer — 73 in service, the backbone of the surface fleet — carries the Mk 45 5-inch gun and Phalanx CIWS. The Mk 45 is an excellent gun for its designed missions: naval surface fire support, anti-ship engagement, and engaging individual aircraft or cruise missiles at range with VT-fuzed rounds. It is a poor gun for drone swarms. Its rate of fire of 16–20 rounds per minute is structurally inadequate for volume-of-fire engagements; its shell weight of approximately 32 kilograms per complete round is grossly overmatched against a 10-kilogram FPV airframe; and its magazine capacity of approximately 600 rounds, while substantial, is consumed in approximately 30 minutes at maximum sustained rate — against an adversary that can generate swarms numbering in the hundreds.

The Hypervelocity Projectile (HVP), a guided sub-caliber round originally developed for the cancelled electromagnetic railgun program, is being adapted for the Mk 45 by BAE Systems. USS Jason Dunham tested HVP against drone targets in a fleet trial in August 2024 with confirmed effectiveness against Group 3 UAS threats. The House Armed Services Committee acknowledged HVP among four systems evaluated as capable of defeating Group 3 drones more cost-effectively than VLS missiles. But HVP is a guided round seeking a direct hit — a fundamentally different solution from the proximity fuze approach of the 3P, with commensurately higher unit cost and a seeker that adds a single point of failure absent in a passive proximity fuze. It fills a niche above the 3P's swarm layer, not within it.

The amphibious force is in the most precarious position. The America-class LHA — the primary amphibious assault ship, the ship that must go over the beach in a contested environment — carries no medium-caliber gun at all. Its gun armament is limited to two Phalanx CIWS and two Rolling Airframe Missile launchers. An LHA approaching a defended shore with a Marine Expeditionary Unit embarked has a two-kilometer gun solution and a short-range missile solution. The San Antonio-class LPD carries one Mk 45 5-inch gun, one Phalanx, and one RAM launcher. The Wasp-class LHD is similar to the America class. None carries a medium-caliber programmable proximity gun. All are intended, in Marine Corps doctrine, to operate in exactly the environment — contested littoral, within range of shore-based drone launches — where the gap is most dangerous.

The FFG-62 Cancellation: Lost Opportunity and Its Successor

The Constellation-class frigate (FFG-62) was, before its cancellation, the intended correction to this mismatch. Designed around the Italian-French FREMM parent design and modified extensively to U.S. survivability standards, it specified the Mk110 57mm gun, a 32-cell Mk 41 VLS, a robust anti-submarine warfare suite, and the AN/SPY-6(V)3 Enterprise Air Surveillance Radar. This was the ship that would escort both carrier strike groups and amphibious ready groups — putting the 3P capability where the threat is. BAE Systems received a $26 million contract from NAVSEA to equip the class with the Mk110.

The program collapsed under its own weight. Fincantieri Marinette Marine, selected in April 2020 on a fixed-price incentive contract for detailed design and construction, accepted extensive Navy-directed design changes that progressively eroded commonality with the FREMM parent from approximately 85 percent to under 15 percent. Construction of USS Constellation began in August 2022; by April 2025 the ship was approximately 10 percent complete with the design still not finalized. A 2024 Navy shipbuilding review found the program 36 months behind its original 2026 delivery schedule, with first ship delivery now projected no earlier than 2029 at a unit cost approaching $1.5 billion — up from the original $1.28 billion estimate. The yard struggled to hire welders and skilled tradesmen in a tight Wisconsin labor market, and workforce rollover from Freedom-class LCS and Saudi MMSC programs created further scheduling conflicts.

On 25 November 2025, Secretary of the Navy John Phelan announced the cancellation of the last four ships in the six-ship contracted program. Only USS Constellation (FFG-62) and USS Congress (FFG-63), already under construction, would be completed. Phelan was blunt about the arithmetic: "The Constellation-class frigate was canceled because, candidly, it didn't make sense anymore to build it. It was 80 percent of the cost of a DDG-51 and 60 percent of the capability. You might as well build destroyers."

The replacement announced on 19 December 2025 is the FF(X), based on the U.S. Coast Guard's Legend-class National Security Cutter hull produced by Huntington Ingalls Industries at Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi. The FF(X) specifications, released at the Surface Navy Association Symposium in January 2026, specify a Mk110 57mm main gun, a Mk 38 Mod 4 30mm secondary gun, a Mk 49 RAM launcher with 21 Rolling Airframe Missiles, and a modular payload stern station accommodating either 16 Naval Strike Missiles or 48 Hellfire missiles for counter-UAS operations. The initial Flight I design carries no VLS cells, a deliberate sacrifice of area air defense capability in exchange for a hull that can be built quickly on a proven production line. CNO Caudle stated the goal of having the first ship launched by 2028; the FY2026 defense appropriations legislation allocated $242 million for long-lead items. Fifty to sixty-five hulls spanning multiple flights are planned.

The FF(X) thus delivers, on a survivable and producible hull, the gun combination — 57mm Mk110 with 3P and 30mm supplementary — that the threat environment requires. The observation from Admiral Caudle that the small surface combatant inventory stands at one-third of what the Navy needs underscores both the urgency of the FF(X) program and the depth of the gap that must be filled while it matures.

"The Constellation-class frigate was canceled because, candidly, it didn't make sense anymore to build it. It was 80 percent of the cost of a DDG-51 and 60 percent of the capability. You might as well build destroyers."

Secretary of the Navy John C. Phelan — Statement on FFG-62 Cancellation, 25 November 2025

Precedent: What the Pacific War Got Right

The current gap is historically novel. In the late Pacific War, every major combatant from destroyer escort to fleet carrier carried all three gun layers: the 5-inch VT-fuzed medium gun, the 40mm Bofors intermediate gun, and the 20mm Oerlikon close-in gun. Fletcher-class destroyers — the archetypal war-era destroyer — carried one or two 40mm twin mounts in addition to their 5-inch battery. The combination worked. VT-fuzed 5-inch rounds engaged aircraft at range; the 40mm layer swept the intermediate band; the 20mm handled the stragglers. When kamikaze attacks began in late 1944, the layered architecture was stressed but held because the Bofors 40mm layer specifically was capable of destroying aircraft before they reached the ship at a rate of fire no guided weapon system could match.

The Arleigh Burke, the most capable destroyer the world has seen, carries nothing between Phalanx at two kilometers and the VLS at many tens of kilometers. That gap did not exist on a Fletcher-class destroyer. The threat that has re-opened it — cheap, slow, numerous drones — is in some respects more like the kamikaze than like the Soviet anti-ship missile the Burke was designed to defeat. The kamikaze was a one-way attack weapon, cheap relative to the ships it targeted, arriving in numbers, flying low and slow compared to conventional aircraft. The Navy built hundreds of Bofors mounts to answer it. The answer to the drone is the same gun, eighty years later, in solid-state form.

The Path Forward: Recommendations

Immediate and Near-Term Actions Required

  1. Containerize and palletize the Bofors 40 Mk4 for Arleigh Burke installation now. BAE Systems presented containerized configurations at Sea Air Space 2025. The Navy should accelerate evaluation and fielding of containerized Bofors 40 Mk4 systems on DDG-51 Flight II and IIA ships as a near-term bridge pending long-term solutions. The containerized architecture allows rapid installation without major structural modification and rapid removal for reloading or reconfiguration.
  2. Specify the Mk110 57mm / 3P as the standard medium-caliber gun for all future surface combatants without exception. The FF(X) program has correctly specified the Mk110. This specification should be locked, protected from weight and cost reduction trades, and extended as a firm requirement to any DDG-51 Flight IV design or Burke successor. The 3P round must be procured in depth for both LCS and FF(X) inventories at rates that reflect combat consumption assumptions, not peacetime demonstration quantities.
  3. Install medium-caliber programmable proximity gun capability on the America-class LHA and Wasp-class LHD. These ships are the amphibious assault platforms most likely to operate in the contested littoral environment against drone threats and lack any medium-caliber gun capability. A containerized Bofors 40 Mk4 or a dedicated sponson-mounted Mk110 installation should be evaluated for both classes. An America-class LHA going over the beach in a drone-saturated environment with only Phalanx at 2 km and RAM is unacceptably exposed.
  4. Procure the Mark 295 Mod 0 (3P 57mm) at volume consistent with wartime consumption rates. The 3P round's utility is a function of magazine depth. Current procurement quantities reflect a peacetime demonstration posture. The FY2026 and FY2027 budgets should establish multi-year procurement contracts that build combat reserve stocks across the LCS, USCG NSC, and FF(X) programs.
  5. Accelerate FF(X) Flight II specifications to include VLS and improved sensor capability. Flight I is an acceptable rapid-fielding compromise. Flight II must add at minimum a 16-cell Mk 41 VLS for ESSM and VLS-ASROC to give the frigate the anti-air and anti-submarine depth required for escort of amphibious ready groups in contested environments. The LCS's failure to deliver capable mission modules must not be repeated through complacency about Flight II development timelines.
  6. Continue HVP development for the Mk 45 as a complementary, not alternative, capability layer. HVP addresses a different band of the engagement problem — guided engagement of individual high-value threats above the 3P swarm layer — and deserves continued investment. It does not substitute for proximity fuze volume-of-fire capability and should not be used to justify delay in the containerized Bofors solution.

The Genealogical Argument

There is something fitting about the solution. The VT proximity fuze, developed at Johns Hopkins APL using miniaturized vacuum tubes that James Van Allen spent a year engineering to survive 20,000g and 28,000 rpm in a 5-inch shell, was ranked by the APL alongside radar and the atomic bomb as one of the three most valuable technology developments of the Second World War. Its first operational use was by the 5-inch guns of USS Helena against Japanese aircraft south of Guadalcanal on 5 January 1943. The proximity fuze principle — detonate near the target, not on contact — multiplied the effectiveness of naval gun fire against aerial threats by a factor of three.

The Bofors 3P round is the direct descendant of that principle, implemented not in five hand-selected glass vacuum tubes but in solid-state ASIC electronics, MEMS inertial sensors, and a miniaturized RF proximity detector that occupies a fraction of the volume at a fraction of the cost. The fire control computer programs each round individually in the milliseconds before firing, feeding target geometry that Van Allen could not have dreamed of. The projectile costs $27. The threat it is designed to kill costs $35,000 — a 1,300-to-one favorable cost ratio that is the economic inverse of the Patriot-versus-Shahed exchange.

The Navy that invented the proximity fuze, mass-produced twenty-two million of them, and used them to transform the cost-effectiveness of anti-aircraft fire in the Pacific War has allowed the institutional knowledge of why it worked to fade from its armament philosophy. The drone swarm is the kamikaze's grandchild: cheap, numerous, one-way, arriving in the specific engagement band where gun systems dominate. The gun has evolved into solid-state form. The ship classes that need it are being built — too few and too slowly. The ships doing the fighting do not have it.

That is the gap. Closing it is not a future capability aspiration. It is an urgent operational requirement that the Red Sea has demonstrated in billion-dollar terms.


References and Sources

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  24. Inside Unmanned Systems. (2026, January 12). "2025 Proved the Case for Drone Defense." [Shahed at $20,000–$40,000; Patriot asymmetry; production rate disparity; affordable-volume C-UAS shortage.] https://insideunmannedsystems.com/2025-proved-the-case-for-drone-defense/
  25. Defense.info. (2026, March 13). "From Red Sea Defense to Epic Fury: How the U.S. Flipped the Drone Cost Equation." [USN ~$1B Houthi intercept cost through April 2024; SM-2/SM-6 economics; Del Toro quote on sustainability.] https://defense.info/featured-story/2026/03/from-red-sea-defense-to-epic-fury-how-the-u-s-flipped-the-drone-cost-equation/
  26. CSIS / Cancian, M. et al. (2025, December 10). "Calculating the Cost-Effectiveness of Russia's Drone Strikes." [Shahed-136 $35,000 median; 14,700+ one-way attack drones Sept. 2022–Dec. 2024; cost asymmetry analysis.] https://www.csis.org/analysis/calculating-cost-effectiveness-russias-drone-strikes
  27. Norsk Luftvern. (2025, June 26). "The Drone Defense Economics Crisis: When $3M Missiles Target $38K Drones." [PAC-3 $4.2M; SM-2 ~$2M; IRIS-T ~$450K; 650–740 Patriot rounds produced annually; Shahed production rate.] https://norskluftvern.com/2025/06/26/the-drone-defense-economics-crisis-when-3m-missiles-target-38k-drones/
  28. U.S. Naval Institute / Collier, C.D. (1999, August). "Tiny Miracle — The Proximity Fuze." Naval History Magazine, Vol. 13, No. 4. [Forrestal quote; Helena first kill Jan. 5, 1943; VT fuze ranked with radar and atomic bomb by APL.] https://www.usni.org/magazines/naval-history-magazine/1999/august/tiny-miracle-proximity-fuze
  29. NavWeaps / Staff. (n.d.). "VT Fuze in World War II." [3–4× effectiveness vs. time fuze; 370% night kill ratio increase; 51% of kills from 25% of rounds in 1943.] http://www.navweaps.com/index_tech/tech-129.php
  30. USNI News / Proceedings. (2025, September). Flynn, K. "Let Drones Play Defense." Proceedings, Vol. 151/9/1,471. [Aegis SAM economics vs. Houthi weapons; Replicator program; OWA drone threat.] https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2025/september/let-drones-play-defense
  31. Wikipedia contributors. (2026, accessed May 13). "Constellation-class frigate." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. [Full program history; November 2025 cancellation; FF(X) announcement December 2025.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constellation-class_frigate
  32. Joint Forces News. (2021, October 30). "Bofors 57mm Mk 110 for New US Navy Frigates." [$26M NAVSEA Mk110 contract for Constellation-class; 220 rpm; 9+ nm effective range with 3P.] https://www.joint-forces.com/defence-equipment-news/47849-bofors-57mm-mk-110-for-new-us-navy-frigates
  33. The Forensic Archive / Medium. (2025, November 12). "Sweden's Tridon Mk2 Shoots 40mm Programmable Rounds at $27 Each — Patriot Costs $4 Million." [3P at $27/round; Tridon Mk2 cost-per-kill 1:185 vs. Shahed; Ukraine deployment data.] https://medium.com/@Forensic-Archive/swedens-tridon-mk2-shoots-40mm-programmable-rounds-at-27-each-patriot-costs-4-million-874b3b45e031

Prepared in the analytical style of U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings  ·  Research current through May 2026  ·  Surface Warfare · Weapons · Force Structure

Managing Agriculture by Measuring Pollinating Insects

 

From Lab Bench to Orchard

A new millimeter-wave radar can identify a pollinator from the micro-Doppler signature of its wings. The interesting question for working agriculture is no longer whether the technique works, but how it is fielded—on poles, on UAVs, or stitched into the cellular fabric already going up around the farm.

Bottom Line Up Front 

Pollinating insects support roughly 35 percent of global food crop production by volume.1 Commercial growers of pollinator-dependent crops—almonds, blueberries, apples, cherries, melons, sunflower, canola, hybrid seed—already pay for pollination services as a major line item, but they have historically had no quantitative way to verify which insects are working their fields. A new millimeter-wave (mmWave) radar technique reported in PNAS Nexus in April 2026 by Antony et al. closes that gap by classifying pollinator species in flight from their wingbeat micro-Doppler signature.2 The operational use case is straightforward: continuous, species-resolved pollinator activity maps that let a grower verify pollination contracts, time pesticide and irrigation events around peak foraging, validate hedgerow and cover-crop investments, and trigger contingency hive deployments when activity falls below the threshold for adequate fruit set. The hardware is feasible today on three platform classes—fixed pole-mounted nodes, tethered or free-flying small UAVs, and 5G/6G base stations operating dual-use as biodiversity sensors. UAV deployment is technically achievable with current 60–94 GHz automotive radar chipsets (the Size, Weight, and Power budget is approximately 50–150 g and under 10 W); the binding constraints are atmospheric attenuation, ego-motion clutter on multirotor platforms, and the very small radar cross-section of a flying insect, which limits practical detection ranges to roughly 5–15 meters. A hybrid architecture—dense fixed nodes in high-value zones, UAV scouting for broader survey coverage—offers the best near-term match to current grower economics.

What the Radar Actually Sees

The Trinity College Dublin / Technical University of Denmark system reported by Linta Antony, Adam Narbudowicz, Ian Donohue, Jane Stout and colleagues exploits a phenomenon any radar engineer will recognize from helicopter-versus-fixed-wing classification: micro-Doppler modulation. A continuously transmitted millimeter-wave signal scatters off an insect's body and wings; the wings, beating at species-characteristic frequencies on the order of 100–400 Hz for bees and faster for flies, impose a comb of sidebands on the return. A hierarchical machine-learning model extracts more than seventy harmonic, spectral, and temporal features from those sidebands and assigns the target to a species class. In controlled trials the system separated honeybees (Apis mellifera), buff-tailed bumblebees (Bombus terrestris), and common wasps (Vespula vulgaris) with high confidence, including pairs that are notoriously difficult to discriminate visually.2

The signal physics are not new. W-band coherent radar measurements of insect wingbeat frequencies were demonstrated as early as 2017 by Wang et al. at Beijing Institute of Technology, and harmonic radar tagging of individual bees by Rothamsted Research goes back to the 1990s.3 What is new in the 2026 work is the combination of (a) chip-scale 60–94 GHz transceivers that did not exist commercially a decade ago, (b) a sufficiently large training dataset, and (c) classifier architectures that can run on embedded silicon. Together these turn what used to be a laboratory measurement into a fieldable instrument.

The Operational Concept: How a Grower Uses the Data

Pollination is unusual among major crop inputs in that almost no grower currently measures it directly. Hive counts, placement maps, and visual scouting are the standard, and BeeHero CEO Omer Davidi summarized the resulting visibility gap bluntly to AgTech Navigator: a grower may know how many hives were placed in the orchard, but that does not tell them how the pollinators are actually behaving or whether they are meeting the orchard's requirements.4 Two commercial systems—BeeHero's in-hive acoustic sensors and AgriSound's Polly field-mounted acoustic monitors, the latter recently deployed across 73 hectares of Spanish and Portuguese almond orchards in a partnership with Importaco—have begun to close that gap with sound.45 mmWave radar adds two capabilities those acoustic systems do not provide: species-level discrimination, and the ability to detect insects that are not making detectable sound at the sensor.

A working operational concept (CONOPS) for the grower has three phases keyed to the agricultural calendar:

Phase 1: Pre-Bloom Baseline

For roughly two weeks before bloom, the sensor network establishes a baseline of background insect activity—what wild pollinators are present, in what species mix, at what times of day, and in which zones of the field. This baseline sets expectations and identifies pollinator-poor zones that may need supplemental managed colonies. A grower investing in hedgerows, wildflower strips, or cover crops can see whether those investments have actually translated into wild bee residency before the crop needs them.

Phase 2: Bloom-Period Real-Time Monitoring

This is where most of the operational value lives. During the 5–14 day peak bloom window, the sensor network produces near-real-time, species-resolved activity maps with the following directly actionable outputs:

  • Pollination contract verification. California almond growers paid roughly $200–$300 per hive in 2025–2026, and tight bee supplies after the 2024–2025 colony collapse have driven scrutiny of contract performance.6 Radar-confirmed honeybee foraging activity in the immediate orchard, distinguished from non-honeybee insects nearby, gives both grower and beekeeper an independent, third-party-quality record of whether contracted hives are actually working the trees.
  • Foraging-aware pesticide and fungicide timing. EPA's 2017 policy already restricts agricultural spray applications during contracted bloom, but timing within the bloom window is at the grower's discretion.7 Real-time activity data lets a grower apply early morning or late evening when foraging is at its diurnal minimum, and skip applications entirely on days of unexpectedly high visitor activity.
  • Wild-pollinator dependence assessment. For crops where wild bees do significant work alongside managed honeybees—blueberries, squash, watermelon, many tree fruits—the species mix tells the grower whether the crop is being pollinated mostly by paid hives or by free wild labor. That changes hive-rental decisions in subsequent years.
  • Trigger thresholds for contingency hives. If activity drops below a calibrated threshold mid-bloom—weather event, pesticide drift from a neighbor, unexplained colony failure—the grower has 24–48 hours to deploy emergency hives. Without monitoring, the loss is typically discovered at harvest, when nothing can be done.
  • Spatial heterogeneity mapping. AgriSound notes that "two orchards with the same hive density can behave very differently. Even within a single orchard, some areas may be highly active while others remain relatively quiet."5 Activity heatmaps direct hive relocations within the season and inform tree-spacing and variety placement in the next planting.

Phase 3: Post-Bloom Yield Correlation

After harvest, the season's pollinator activity record is overlaid on the yield map produced by the combine or hand-counts. Over two or three seasons this yields a quantitative dose–response curve linking species-specific pollinator visit-minutes per square meter to fruit set, kernel weight, and quality grade. That curve becomes the basis for next year's hive-stocking rate, contract pricing, habitat investment, and crop insurance underwriting.

UAV Deployment: Engineering Feasibility

The natural question for any precision-agriculture engineer is whether the radar can ride on a small UAV rather than (or in addition to) a fixed pole. The answer is a qualified yes, and a research program already exists to prove it: the University of Hawai'i Mānoa group led by Yao Zheng and Daniel Jenkins is developing a drone-mounted 12/24 GHz harmonic radar for tracking invasive coconut rhinoceros beetles and melon flies across Hawaiian agriculture, funded for 2026 by the Hawai'i Invasive Species Council in partnership with USDA-PBARC.8 That program uses harmonic radar (which requires a transponder tag) rather than micro-Doppler classification, but it establishes the airframe and RF-payload baseline that a passive mmWave classifier would inherit.

SWaP and Frequency Tradeoffs

A modern automotive cascaded mmWave radar transceiver—Texas Instruments AWR2243, NXP S32R45, or Infineon RXS81xx-class parts at 76–81 GHz—dissipates roughly 5–8 W and weighs under 25 g without the antenna array. Add a chip-scale patch antenna, an embedded GPU or ARM-class processor for the classifier, a stabilization gimbal, and minimal cabling, and the total payload is 100–200 g. That fits comfortably on any sub-2 kg multirotor with 25–35 minutes of hover endurance. The same payload at 60 GHz (the unlicensed V-band used for 5G fixed wireless) trades modest sensitivity loss for more available bandwidth and lower regulatory friction; at 94 GHz the SWaP tightens but Doppler resolution improves and the antenna gets smaller for a given gain.9

What Limits the Sensor

Three engineering constraints dominate the deployment trade space.

Insect radar cross-section. A honeybee at W-band presents an effective radar cross-section roughly five to six orders of magnitude smaller than a small drone—on the order of 10⁻⁵ to 10⁻⁴ m².3 By the fourth-power range dependence in the radar equation, this collapses practical detection ranges to roughly 5–15 m for the wingbeat micro-Doppler features the classifier needs. That is a constraint, not a fatal one: most pollination happens in a thin foraging layer 0.5–3 m above the canopy, which a UAV at 5–8 m altitude can easily cover.

Atmospheric attenuation. The 60 GHz V-band sits squarely in the oxygen absorption peak (~15 dB/km one-way), but that is irrelevant at 10 m ranges. Rain attenuation matters more for outdoor operation; mmWave systems lose significant range in heavy rain, which conveniently is also when pollinators stop flying.

Ego-motion clutter. A multirotor's rotors and airframe vibrate at frequencies that overlap the wingbeat band of interest. Mitigation requires either (a) a tethered hover platform that can be dynamically stabilized, (b) onboard motion compensation using IMU-derived ego-Doppler estimates, or (c) brief station-keeping pauses with rotors at idle—the last being non-trivial for safety. Fixed-wing UAVs avoid the rotor problem but cannot hover.

Three Deployment Architectures

Architecture Best For Coverage / Sensor Capex Class Key Tradeoff
Fixed pole nodes High-value perennial crops (almond, cherry, blueberry orchards) ~80–300 m² each Low per node, scales with hectares Many sensors required for whole-field coverage
Tethered hover UAV Mid-size operations needing one mobile zone of attention ~1 ha per platform Medium; one platform per 25–50 ha Cable management; weather-limited
Free-flying multirotor scout Large diffuse fields (canola, sunflower, hybrid seed) ~1 ha per 30-min flight at 1.5 m/s Medium; scales by flight tempo, not hectares Battery cycles; ego-motion clutter; pilot/BVLOS waivers
5G/6G base-station co-host Long-term, regional biodiversity monitoring Cell-coverage scale Effectively free if telecoms cooperate Sensor placement optimized for comms, not entomology

The Antony et al. paper explicitly flags the fourth option: their 60 GHz hardware is "compatible with emerging mmWave communication and sensing infrastructures, such as 5G/6G and IoT," meaning that the same towers carrier networks are installing along rural highway corridors could one day report pollinator species data without dedicated sensors.2 That is a long-horizon prospect, but it changes the unit economics of large-scale monitoring in a way that fixed entomological networks never could.

Recommended Hybrid Architecture

For a representative California almond grower running a 100-hectare operation, the operational picture that emerges is roughly this:

  • Permanent fixed nodes at canopy-adjacent height every 30–50 m through the highest-value blocks, transmitting hourly aggregated species counts to a farm-management dashboard. Density: ~50–100 sensors. This is the steady-state monitoring layer.
  • One or two tethered hover platforms deployed during peak bloom for about ten days, providing high-resolution coverage of any block where fixed-sensor data has flagged anomalies.
  • Periodic free-flying scout flights—weekly during bloom, monthly off-season—for whole-orchard sweeps that map species mix at higher spatial resolution than any practical fixed network can deliver.
  • Cellular co-located sensors at the carrier's nearest 5G mmWave node, where available, providing perimeter and regional-context data at no marginal cost.

This architecture answers the practical question of "how do I afford to monitor 100 hectares to species level" by acknowledging that the grower does not need uniform coverage—they need dense coverage where pollination is the binding yield constraint and survey coverage everywhere else.

Where This Fits Among Existing Tools

mmWave radar is not a replacement for in-hive monitoring (BeeHero, with roughly 25 million daily in-hive samples by mid-202410) nor for acoustic field monitoring (AgriSound Polly, deployed at 120-plus sensors per orchard in commercial trials5). Each layer answers a different question:

  • In-hive sensors tell the beekeeper and grower that the colony is alive, queen-right, and growing.
  • Acoustic field sensors tell the grower that bees are flying in the orchard and roughly how active they are.
  • mmWave radar tells the grower which species are flying, where, and when—information that neither of the others provides.

For a high-value perennial crop with a complex pollinator portfolio—blueberries pollinated by a mix of honeybees, bumblebees, mason bees, and native bees, for example—species-level data closes the last meaningful information gap in the pollination value chain.

The Backdrop That Justifies the Investment

The case for any of this rests on a recent and uncomfortable empirical record. U.S. commercial beekeepers lost an average of 62 percent of their colonies between June 2024 and February 2025—approximately 1.7 million hives, valued at roughly $600 million—and USDA's Agricultural Research Service has since traced the cause to amitraz-resistant Varroa mites vectoring deformed wing virus and acute bee paralysis virus.1112 The October 2025 IUCN European Red List update classified 172 of 1,928 wild bee species (about 10 percent) as threatened with extinction, more than double the 2014 figure.13 A May 2026 Nature study documented that wild pollinators provide 44 percent of farming income and over 20 percent of vitamin A, folate, and vitamin E intake in vulnerable smallholder communities.14

For a working grower, the practical implication is straightforward. The supply curve for managed pollination services has shifted hard to the left—fewer hives available, at higher prices, with greater year-to-year variance—at the same time that the wild-pollinator backstop is thinning. Quantitative pollination monitoring stops being a research curiosity under those conditions and starts being a risk-management tool.

Forward Roadmap

Three things must happen for mmWave pollinator radar to move from peer-reviewed proof of concept into routine commercial agriculture.

First, the species library has to expand. The Trinity team's published dataset covers a small set of European pollinators; a U.S. grower needs reference signatures for the local Bombus, Xylocopa, Osmia, Megachile, hoverflies, and several non-target species (yellowjackets, paper wasps, bee mimics). Each new species requires controlled training data with known ground truth, which is the limiting factor in classifier scope.

Second, outdoor classifier robustness must be validated. Wind-blown vegetation, blowing dust, ambient temperature drift, and overlapping insects in a single radar resolution cell all degrade classification accuracy. Field trials currently underway at Trinity, and parallel work at the Hawaii drone-radar program, will produce the data needed to characterize that degradation.

Third, the integration layer—from radar return to grower dashboard to action—has to come down to commodity pricing. BeeHero, AgriSound, and PollenOps have built that pipeline for acoustic and in-hive sensors,1015 and there is no obvious technical reason a radar feed should cost more to pipe through than any other IoT signal. The first commercial deployments will likely come from one of those existing precision-pollination platforms adding mmWave as an additional sensor modality, rather than from a clean-sheet radar startup.

The instrument has, in short, finally arrived. Whether the agricultural sector picks it up at the speed the colony-loss data suggests it should is the open question.


Verified Sources

  1. Klein, A.-M., et al., "Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops," Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 274:303–313, 2007. Foundational figure: 87 of leading global food crops, ~35% of crop production volume. Cited in CABI Reviews (2024).
    https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/10.1079/cabireviews.2024.0016
  2. Antony, L., White, C., Marchetti, N., Donohue, I., Stout, J. C., and Narbudowicz, A., "Harnessing mmWave signals and machine learning for noninvasive taxonomic classification of insects," PNAS Nexus, vol. 5, no. 4, pgag096, April 2026. DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgag096.
    https://academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/article/5/4/pgag096/8662959
  3. Wang, R., Hu, C., Fu, X., Long, T., and Zeng, T., "Micro-Doppler measurement of insect wing-beat frequencies with W-band coherent radar," Scientific Reports, 7:1396, May 2017. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-01616-4.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5431090/
  4. "How precision pollination promises to increase crop yields," AgTech Navigator, March 2024 (BeeHero Pollination Insight Platform 2.0; California almond deployments).
    https://www.agtechnavigator.com/Article/2024/03/06/how-precision-pollination-promises-to-increase-crop-yields/
  5. "AgriSound and Importaco put pollination under the microscope to de-risk almond sourcing," AgTech Navigator, April 2026 (Polly sensor deployment, Zurria Spain 50 ha and Freixo Portugal 23 ha).
    https://agtechnavigator.com/Article/2026/04/10/agrisound-and-importaco-put-pollination-under-the-microscope-to-derisk-almond-sourcing/
  6. "Bees Are Gold: Almond Pollination in 2026," AgNet West, February 2026 (BeeHero interview at World Ag Expo on tight bee supplies and rising costs after 2024–25 colony losses).
    https://agnetwest.com/almond-pollination-2026-bee-hero/
  7. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "EPA Actions to Protect Pollinators" (2017 spray-application policy during contracted bloom).
    https://www.epa.gov/pollinator-protection/epa-actions-protect-pollinators
  8. Zheng, Y., Cai, H., and Jenkins, D., "Drone-Mounted mmWave Harmonic Radar for Invasive Insect Monitoring," University of Hawai'i Mānoa, funded 2026 by Hawai'i Invasive Species Council. Field validation with USDA-PBARC and NIWC Pacific.
    http://www2.hawaii.edu/~yaozheng/grant/2026_hisc_harmonic_radar/
  9. Bauer, S., Tielens, E. K., and Haest, B., "Monitoring aerial insect biodiversity: a radar perspective," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 2024. DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0113. Reviews radar entomology and frequency-band tradeoffs.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11070259/
  10. "BeeHero Launches Pollination Insight Platform 2.0," BeeHero corporate release, July 2024 (25 million in-hive samples per day; species range identifiable: leaf-cutter bees, hover flies, carpenter bees, bumblebees, honeybees).
    https://www.beehero.io/research/beehero-launches-pollination-insight-platform-2-0
  11. Auburn University College of Agriculture / Project Apis m. / American Beekeeping Federation / Apiary Inspectors of America, "U.S. Beekeeping Survey 2024–2025," reported June 2025. Annual losses 55.6%; commercial losses 62%; range 34.3%–90.5%.
    https://agriculture.auburn.edu/feature/u-s-beekeeping-survey-reveals-highest-honeybee-colony-losses-during-2024-2025/
  12. USDA Agricultural Research Service, "USDA Researchers Find Viruses from Miticide Resistant Parasitic Mites are Cause of Recent Honey Bee Colony Collapses," 2 June 2025. Peer-reviewed publication: Lamas, Z. S., Evans, J. D., et al., PLOS Pathogens, 23 February 2026.
    https://www.ars.usda.gov/news-events/news/research-news/2025/usda-researchers-find-viruses-from-miticide-resistant-parasitic-mites-are-cause-of-recent-honey-bee-colony-collapses/
  13. IUCN, "Mounting Risks Threaten Survival of Wild European Pollinators – IUCN Red List," 11 October 2025.
    https://iucn.org/press-release/202510/mounting-risks-threaten-survival-wild-european-pollinators-iucn-red-list
  14. Timberlake, T. P., et al., "Pollinators support the nutrition and income of vulnerable communities," Nature, 6 May 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10421-x.
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10421-x
  15. "Pollination Contract Software for Almond and Berry Growers," PollenOps, 2026 (grower portal for hive count verification, placement, and bloom alignment).
    https://pollenops.com/pollination-contract-software-for-growers

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

The Long Goodbye: Seventy-Five Years of Vacuum Tube Displacement by Solid-State Electronics


The Vacuum Tube’s Last Stand(s) | Hackaday

Semiconductors & Materials · History of Technology Analysis · Special Report

From the point-contact transistor demonstrated at Bell Labs on 16 December 1947 to GaN-based amplifiers now displacing traveling-wave tubes aboard commercial satellites, the transition from thermionic to solid-state devices has been neither sudden nor complete — and in at least two strategically critical domains, the vacuum tube endures.

The popular narrative that the transistor instantly rendered vacuum tubes obsolete after 1947 is historically false and analytically misleading. Solid-state devices displaced thermionic devices gradually, domain by domain, over a period spanning seven decades and still ongoing. The vacuum tube reached its engineering apex in wartime: the cavity magnetron gave the Allies centimetric radar and a decisive operational advantage; the VT proximity fuze — five Van Allen-designed tubes surviving 20,000g firing loads in a 5-inch shell — ranked with radar and the atomic bomb as one of the three most important technology developments of the Second World War. Digital computing was the tube's Achilles heel: catastrophic series-reliability failures and enormous heat loads in machines like ENIAC (18,000 tubes, 150 kW, 30 tons) made solid-state replacement an existential necessity, and the resulting miniaturization trajectory compressed that building-sized machine to a sub-3-nanometer chip containing 16 billion transistors. In RF power, audio, and radar, tubes held far longer — with the displacement of high-power radar tube transmitters completed only through AESA system architecture, not by finding a solid-state device capable of matching a klystron directly. The final displacement frontier — satellite traveling-wave tube amplifiers — is only now being crossed by GaN solid-state power amplifiers. The U.S. Department of Defense's DARPA VAMPS program confirms that vacuum tubes remain militarily irreplaceable in millimeter-wave electronic warfare applications for the foreseeable future.

Every engineer who has ever troubleshot a tube-era system knows the feeling: the warm orange glow of a filament inside a glass envelope, the sharp smell of a grid running hot, the satisfying snap of a loctal socket. Those sensory memories accompany a technology that shaped the first half of the twentieth century's electrical age — and that has refused, with remarkable stubbornness, to disappear entirely into the second half.

The displacement of vacuum tubes by solid-state devices is among the most studied transitions in the history of electrical engineering, yet it is persistently misrepresented in popular accounts as a clean, decisive event — a technological coup de grâce delivered in the late 1940s or early 1950s. The historical record is considerably more complex. What actually occurred was a protracted, domain-specific replacement process in which solid-state devices advanced front by front, ceding no territory easily but ultimately winning every one — except, as of this writing, at the upper frontier of RF power and frequency, where the vacuum tube still reigns.

The Transistor's Birth and Its Modest Promise

On the afternoon of 23 December 1947, William Shockley, John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain demonstrated a point-contact germanium semiconductor amplifier to colleagues and managers at Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey. Shockley called it, in his diary, "a magnificent Christmas present." The device amplified speech with a power gain of 18 dB. Bell Labs publicly announced the invention at a press conference in New York on 30 June 1948, at which a spokesman offered that it "may have far-reaching significance in electronics and electrical communication" — a statement that proved, in hindsight, one of the most spectacular understatements in the history of technology. The three inventors shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics for their achievement.

Yet the significance of the transistor was genuinely not apparent to all who witnessed the announcement. The device was fragile, required careful handling of its germanium crystal, and operated reliably only within a narrow temperature range. It was noisy by the standards of even modest vacuum tubes. It could not, in 1948, amplify at frequencies above a few megahertz. The entire commercial radio and communications infrastructure — the Bell telephone system, the broadcast industry, military radar — ran on tubes. Tubes were improving rapidly. Engineers who had spent their careers mastering thermionic technology were not about to abandon it for a finicky germanium whisker that might drift out of calibration on a warm day.

"Tubes often outperformed transistors in RF circuits, audio applications, and high-power systems well into the 1960s. For a significant period, designers genuinely did not know which technology would dominate certain markets."

Hackaday, "The Vacuum Tube's Last Stand(s)," 11 May 2026

This ambiguity persisted for a full decade after the transistor's announcement. The point-contact transistor was superseded by Shockley's bipolar junction transistor (BJT) design, which entered production in the early 1950s and became the basis for the first commercially practical solid-state amplifiers and switches. Texas Instruments and the IDEA Corporation introduced the first commercial transistor radio, the Regency T-1, in time for the 1954 holiday season — a pivotal consumer-market event. But consumer radios were a relatively simple application. The far more demanding domains of defense electronics, RF communications, broadcast transmission, and instrumentation remained tube territory for years longer.

Radar: The Strategic Birthplace of Microwave Tubes

To understand why vacuum tubes proved so durable in the RF power domain, it is necessary to begin not at the transistor's 1947 birth but earlier — at the moment radar emerged as the defining military technology of the Second World War and imposed requirements on electronics that no receiving tube, however refined, could meet. The result was an entirely new category of thermionic device, the microwave power tube, whose physics differ so fundamentally from those of a receiving triode that the two share little beyond the evacuated envelope.

The Cavity Magnetron and the Centimetric Revolution

In February 1940, physicists John Randall and Harry Boot at the University of Birmingham demonstrated a cavity magnetron that produced approximately 400 watts of continuous-wave power at a wavelength of 10 centimeters — roughly 3 GHz, what would become S-band. This was a leap of roughly forty times over the power available from the best klystrons of the period, which produced on the order of 10 watts. The significance was immediate: centimetric radar, operating at wavelengths short enough to use practically sized dish antennas aboard aircraft and ships, was suddenly achievable. The British government recognized the magnetron as so important that when the Tizard Mission traveled to the United States in September 1940 to share British scientific developments with American counterparts, the cavity magnetron was the crown jewel of the exchange. Vannevar Bush and James Conant established the MIT Radiation Laboratory within weeks of receiving it; at its peak the Rad Lab employed approximately 3,900 people and produced radar systems that equipped Allied aircraft, ships, and shore installations throughout the war.

The klystron, independently invented by Russell and Sigurd Varian at Stanford in 1937, provided a complementary capability: a velocity-modulated electron beam that could amplify microwave signals with high gain and coherent phase. Where the magnetron was an oscillator — powerful but incapable of being phase-locked pulse to pulse — the klystron was an amplifier, critical for coherent radar modes including moving target indication (MTI) for clutter rejection. After the war, AT&T deployed 4-watt klystrons in its nationwide microwave relay network for long-distance telephone and television transmission, one of the earliest large-scale peacetime applications of microwave tube technology.

The magnetron's pulse-to-pulse phase instability, which had been acceptable in early fire-control and search radars, became a liability as radar designers demanded coherent processing in the 1960s. Klystrons and TWTs progressively displaced magnetrons in high-performance military and scientific radar systems, while the magnetron found a vast civilian second life in the microwave oven, where more than a billion have since been produced — making it arguably the most widely manufactured power microwave tube in history.

Radar's Slow Transition to Solid State: AESA and the Architectural Solution

The displacement of vacuum tubes in radar did not follow the same pattern as in consumer electronics or even satellite communications. No single solid-state device was ever developed that could directly substitute for a high-power klystron or TWT in a pulsed radar transmitter. Rather, the transition came through a fundamental system-level architectural change: the active electronically scanned array (AESA), in which the single high-power tube transmitter is replaced by hundreds or thousands of individual transmit/receive (T/R) modules, each producing only a few watts, whose outputs are coherently combined in free space to achieve the required effective radiated power.

This architectural substitution was enabled by GaAs monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC) technology from the 1980s onward, and then by GaN T/R modules from the 2000s onward. The F-22 Raptor's AN/APG-77 AESA radar, developed in the 1990s, was among the first operational fighter radars to use this approach; the F-35's AN/APG-81, incorporating GaN T/R modules, extended the capability to a fifth-generation multirole platform. In both cases, the power advantage of tube transmitters was not matched device-for-device; it was circumvented through aperture-level coherent combining — a solution unavailable to earlier generations of radar designers lacking affordable, high-density solid-state T/R technology.

Tube-based radar transmitters nonetheless remain in service in high-power ground-based air defense systems, ballistic missile defense radars, space surveillance installations, and weather radars where very high peak powers — kilowatts to megawatts — are required from a single coherent source. The physics that made microwave tubes indispensable in 1942 have not been repealed; they have been progressively worked around by system architectures whose feasibility depends entirely on the maturation of solid-state RF technology across the eight subsequent decades.

The Apex of Thermionic Engineering: The VT Proximity Fuze

If ENIAC represents the failure mode of vacuum tube technology — too many tubes, too much heat, too unreliable for continuous operation — then the Variable Time (VT) proximity fuze represents its apotheosis: a triumph of miniaturization, ruggedization, and ingenuity that produced a device the transistor age has never had to replicate, because it had no precedent before it and no need for duplication after solid-state alternatives became available.

The problem the proximity fuze solved was brutally simple to state and extraordinarily difficult to execute. Anti-aircraft shells, to be effective against fast-moving aircraft, must detonate not on contact but in the near vicinity of the target. A contact fuze that misses by three feet is useless. A timed fuze requires the gunner to predict the target's position at the moment of shell arrival — a calculation that even computerized fire-control directors could not make reliably enough against maneuvering aircraft at the engagement rates of modern war. What was needed was a shell that could sense its own proximity to a target and trigger its own detonation accordingly.

The Engineering Challenge at 20,000g

Beginning in 1940, Section T of the National Defense Research Committee — led by physicist Merle Tuve and subsequently housed at the Applied Physics Laboratory of Johns Hopkins University — undertook the development of what the British had named, with deliberate vagueness, the Variable Time fuze. The concept was straightforward: a miniature radio transmitter-receiver would emit a signal; when the reflection from a nearby target returned at a Doppler-shifted frequency indicating lethal proximity, the fuze would close a firing circuit. The execution was the most demanding electronic design problem of the war.

A 5-inch naval gun shell, fired at approximately 2,800 feet per second, subjects everything inside it to a setback force of approximately 20,000 times the acceleration of gravity at the moment of firing. Simultaneously, the rifling grooves of the gun barrel spin the shell at roughly 25,000 to 28,000 revolutions per minute. These conditions — 20,000g axial shock combined with thousands of revolutions per minute of centrifugal stress — are fatal to ordinary electronic components. The glass tubes available in 1940 for miniature applications, such as hearing-aid devices, were wholly unsuitable. James Van Allen, then a young physicist at APL (who would later discover the radiation belts that bear his name), spent nearly a year developing miniature glass vacuum tubes capable of surviving the firing environment. The result was a five-tube assembly, combined with approximately 130 miniaturized electronic components, that fit within the nose of a standard 5-inch projectile and operated reliably after surviving conditions that would destroy virtually any other electronic assembly of the era.

"The new shell with the funny fuze is devastating. We caught a German battalion trying to get across the Sauer River with a battalion concentration and killed by actual count 702. I think that when all armies get this shell we will have to devise some new method of warfare."

General George S. Patton, Third Army — December 1944, Battle of the Bulge

Operational Impact and Industrial Scale

The VT fuze's first operational use came on 5 January 1943, when USS Helena's 5-inch guns, operating southwest of Guadalcanal, downed a Japanese Aichi D3A dive bomber — the first time an enemy aircraft had been destroyed by a proximity-fuzed shell. The engagement validated years of engineering development and triggered immediate Navy-wide deployment. The results were decisive: by 1943, VT-fuzed shells, representing only 25 percent of anti-aircraft ammunition issued to the fleet, accounted for approximately 51 percent of Japanese aircraft kills — roughly three times the effectiveness per round of conventional timed fuzes.

Deployment against the German V-1 flying bomb campaign over Britain in 1944 produced results that, in Churchill's words, proved the fuzes "potent against the small unmanned aircraft." The proportion of V-1s destroyed by coastal anti-aircraft batteries rose from 17 percent to 74 percent, and to 82 percent on the best single day of the campaign. At the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, 200,000 VT-fuzed artillery shells (Army code name POZIT) were released for ground combat use at General Eisenhower's personal insistence. The effect on German infantry in the open was, as Patton wrote, devastating.

Industrial mobilization for the fuze was extraordinary. More than 100 American manufacturers — including Crosley, RCA, Eastman Kodak, General Electric, Sylvania, and Westinghouse, along with over 2,000 suppliers and sub-suppliers — were eventually engaged in production. Procurement contracts grew from $60 million in 1942 to $450 million in 1945. Unit cost fell from $732 per fuze in 1942 to $18 by 1945, a forty-fold reduction through manufacturing learning. By war's end, some 22 million VT fuzes had been produced. The program is also historically notable as among the first mass-production applications of printed circuit technology.

The VT fuze was judged by Johns Hopkins APL, and by postwar assessment, to rank alongside radar and the atomic bomb as one of the three most important technology developments of the Second World War. It stands in the history of vacuum tube engineering as the proof-of-concept that thermionic devices could be made arbitrarily small, arbitrarily rugged, and arbitrarily reliable when the engineering investment was sufficient and the stakes were high enough. No transistor existed to replace it in 1943; none was needed by the time transistors arrived, because the war was over. The VT fuze was a technology that lived its entire life — from conception to obsolescence — entirely within the thermionic era, and left no direct solid-state successor, because its problem had been solved.

The Decisive Case for Solid-State: Heat, Reliability, and the Computing Imperative

If the transistor's initial advantages were modest in radio and communications, they were overwhelming in one rapidly emerging application domain: digital computing. Here, the fundamental physics of the vacuum tube — its hot cathode, its power-hungry filament, its glass or metal envelope maintained at high vacuum — became not merely an engineering inconvenience but a systemic barrier to progress. The story of computing from ENIAC to the smartphone is inseparable from the story of solid-state displacement, because computing drove the displacement faster and harder than any other application.

The Series Reliability Catastrophe

ENIAC — the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, completed at the University of Pennsylvania in 1945 — embodied the tube computer's fundamental reliability crisis in undeniable physical terms. By the end of its operational life in 1956, ENIAC contained approximately 18,000 vacuum tubes, 7,200 crystal diodes, 6,000 relays, 70,000 resistors, 10,000 capacitors, and roughly five million hand-soldered joints. The machine weighed more than 30 short tons, stood approximately 3 meters tall, extended 30 meters in length, and consumed 150 kilowatts of electrical power — enough to power a small neighborhood. The heat load alone necessitated dedicated cooling infrastructure.

The reliability problem was not that any individual tube was particularly unreliable; military-specification tubes of the era were reasonably well-made. The problem was combinatorial. In a digital computer, every logic stage must function correctly for the machine to produce a valid result. With 18,000 tubes operating in series-logical dependency, the system mean time between failures (MTBF) is mathematically far shorter than the individual component MTBF: if each tube has a mean time to failure of T hours, the expected time to the first system failure is T divided by the number of tubes. Engineers at the Moore School eventually reduced ENIAC's failure rate to approximately one tube every two days — an achievement that represented painstaking burn-in and selection procedures. The longest continuous failure-free run recorded, as late as 1954, was 116 hours. Five days of uninterrupted computation was celebrated as a milestone.

UNIVAC I, the first commercial computer in the United States (1951), used 6,103 vacuum tubes, weighed 8.3 short tons, consumed 125 kilowatts, and occupied more than 35 square meters of floor space. Its manufacturers, J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly, understood the tube reliability problem so intimately that they instituted a systematic burn-in and rejection protocol: prior to installation, large lots of the predominant tube type were burned in and thoroughly tested, and often half of any given production lot was discarded. "Golden" tubes — those that survived extended burn-in — were reserved for the most diagnostically inaccessible circuit positions. This was not an engineering refinement; it was an acknowledgment that the manufacturing yield of tubes acceptable for continuous-duty digital computing was below fifty percent. The economics were extraordinary: a technology where half the output must be discarded for quality is a technology with a structural cost problem that process improvement alone cannot solve.

The Heat Tax

The thermal dimension of tube computing compounded the reliability problem. A vacuum tube in digital service dissipates power continuously, most of it as heat through the filament and anode. ENIAC's 150 kW consumption represents, at typical tube power dissipation figures, a continuous heat load equivalent to roughly fifteen hundred household space heaters operating simultaneously in an enclosed space. The cooling infrastructure required to prevent thermal runaway and maintain acceptable operating temperatures for the tubes — which themselves were temperature-sensitive — could be larger than the computer it served. This was not a solvable engineering problem within the thermionic paradigm: reducing tube power dissipation reduces electron emission, which reduces amplification and switching current, which degrades digital margins. The tube's operating principle required the heat.

A transistor operating from a 5-volt logic supply and switching at the same rate dissipates a small fraction of the energy per transition. As transistor scaling progressed — following the trajectory described by Gordon Moore in his 1965 observation that the number of components per integrated circuit appeared to double approximately every year (later revised to two years) — each successive device generation delivered more switching events per unit of energy, more logic gates per unit of area, and more computation per watt. The tube had no equivalent scaling law.

Speed: The Switching Advantage That Compounded

Beyond reliability and heat, solid-state devices offered a switching speed advantage that grew with each generation. A vacuum tube's switching time is limited by the transit time of electrons crossing from cathode to anode — a distance measured in millimeters traversed at finite velocity — and by the inter-electrode capacitances inherent in its geometry. Reducing these by shrinking the tube (as designers did with acorn tubes and nuvistors) helped at the margins but could not reach the nanosecond switching times that solid-state devices achieved once planar transistor fabrication matured.

The practical consequence appeared vividly in the IBM 709-to-7090 transition. The IBM 709 was a vacuum-tube scientific mainframe announced in 1958 — already being built and sold at the moment transistor circuitry was rendering it obsolescent. IBM redeployed its 709 engineering team immediately to design a transistorized successor, the IBM 7090, delivered in November 1959. The 7090 used more than 50,000 transistors, achieved a basic memory cycle time of 2.18 microseconds with magnetic core storage, and ran approximately six times faster than its tube predecessor — while occupying less floor space, consuming less power, requiring less air conditioning, and renting at roughly half the monthly cost. The U.S. Air Force, which had mandated transistor technology for the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS) computing infrastructure, was among the first operators; NASA mission control subsequently ran dual IBM 7090 systems through the Mercury and Gemini programs.

The trajectory from the IBM 7090 to Intel's 4004 microprocessor in 1971 — 2,300 MOS transistors on a single chip, designed for a calculator — represents twelve years of extraordinary compression: from a room-filling machine of transistorized discrete components to a fingertip-sized device containing a complete 4-bit CPU. Sharp engineer Tadashi Sasaki, who had been instrumental in motivating the 4004 project, later recalled that he had spent decades dreaming of miniaturizing computers to the point where they could fit into a pocket. Moore's Law would make his vision literal: by 2007, the original iPhone carried a processor containing 137 million transistors in a device weighing 135 grams. By 2024, Apple's A18 system-on-chip, manufactured on a sub-3-nanometer process node, integrated approximately 16 billion transistors — the computational equivalent of a building full of ENIAC machines — in a die roughly the size of a human fingernail, consuming approximately 5 watts of power.

No vacuum tube evolution — however elegant the nuvistor, however integrated the compactron — could have produced this outcome. The miniaturization physics were simply inaccessible to thermionic devices. A tube requires a heated cathode, a vacuum envelope, and electrode spacings measured in fractions of a millimeter at minimum. A MOSFET gate can be measured in atoms. The gap was not a matter of engineering effort; it was a matter of physics.

The Tube Designers Fight Back: Innovation at the End of the Thermionic Era

What is easily overlooked is that tube designers did not stand still while transistors advanced. The period from roughly 1945 to 1970 witnessed some of the most technically refined vacuum tube designs ever produced — devices that were direct competitive responses to transistor encroachment.

The Nuvistor and the Compactron

RCA's Nuvistor, introduced in 1959 — twelve years after the transistor's invention — exemplified this spirit. Constructed of metal and ceramic rather than glass, the Nuvistor was extremely compact, highly reliable, vibration-resistant, and exhibited very low noise characteristics that early transistors could not match in RF front-end applications. It found use in television tuners, aerospace electronics, and high-end studio microphones. General Electric's Compactron, introduced in the early 1960s, pursued a different strategy: integration. By combining multiple triode, pentode, or diode sections within a single envelope, the Compactron reduced component count in consumer television sets and offered circuit designers a tube-based analog to the emerging concept of the integrated circuit. GE's Porta-Color, the first portable color television, employed 13 tubes, ten of which were Compactrons.

These were not desperate legacy products. They were serious engineering efforts by major industrial firms competing for real market share. Their ultimate defeat by silicon was an economic outcome, not a technical one: semiconductors could be manufactured using scalable photolithographic processes that allowed cost and size to fall along a predictable exponential trajectory that thermionic devices simply could not replicate.

The Integrated Circuit Delivers the Decisive Blow — in Consumer Electronics

The invention of the MOSFET at Bell Labs between 1955 and 1960 — following Frosch and Derick's discovery of surface passivation by silicon dioxide — established the technical foundation that would eventually produce the modern microprocessor. The MOSFET has since become the most widely manufactured device in history. Once Jack Kilby at Texas Instruments and Robert Noyce at Fairchild Semiconductor independently demonstrated integrated circuits in 1958–1959, the economic logic of solid-state electronics became overwhelming for applications that could be served by low-voltage, logic-speed, room-temperature devices.

Consumer radios transitioned to transistors through the late 1950s and 1960s. Consumer television sets began the same transition in the 1970s, aided directly by components such as the Compactron, which served as a transitional technology keeping television sets economically competitive with early solid-state sets for a decade longer than pure tube designs could have managed. By the late 1970s, consumer electronics were effectively a solid-state domain.

The Domains That Held: RF Power, Audio, and Defense Electronics

Three application categories resisted solid-state displacement far longer than consumer electronics, and for fundamentally different technical reasons.

Radar: The Last Tube Stronghold Yields Slowly

As detailed above, radar was born from microwave tube technology — the cavity magnetron and klystron — and remained dependent on tube transmitters through the Cold War era. The pulsed high-power klystron, producing coherent multi-megawatt peak power for ground-based air defense and ballistic missile defense radars, remains in service in systems where no solid-state architecture offers equivalent range performance from a single aperture. The transition to AESA radar, described above, has largely completed the displacement of tubes from airborne radar and from new-build ground-based military systems, but legacy systems in the installed base — representing decades of capital investment and sustainment infrastructure — continue operating tube-based transmitters that will not be replaced until the platform itself is retired.

High-Power RF Transmission Beyond Radar

At high frequencies and high power levels beyond the radar domain, vacuum tubes have a physical advantage rooted in the behavior of free electrons in vacuum versus charge carriers in a semiconductor lattice. In a traveling-wave tube (TWT), amplification occurs through the interaction of a focused electron beam with a slow-wave electromagnetic structure; no semiconductor thermal dissipation path limits the process. The result is a device capable of combining very high frequency, very wide bandwidth, and very high power in a package that solid-state devices, for decades, could not approach.

Klystrons, magnetrons, and TWTs remained the backbone of satellite uplink earth stations, electronic warfare systems, particle accelerators, and broadcast transmitters through the entire Cold War period and well into the 2000s. The U.S. Department of Defense operates more than 200,000 vacuum electron devices (VEDs), according to figures cited in DARPA program documentation. Removing them is not a matter of preference but of physics — and cost.

Audio: The Warmth Premium

In audio amplification, the tube's survival has been driven not by incapability of solid-state alternatives but by deliberate preference for the tube's characteristic distortion signature. Vacuum tube amplifiers produce predominantly even-order harmonic distortion — principally second harmonic — which the human auditory system perceives as warmth, richness, and what audiophiles describe as "presence." Solid-state amplifiers produce lower total harmonic distortion by measurement, but the distortion they do produce is concentrated in odd-order harmonics, which the ear perceives as harsh. The result is a persistent, enthusiast-driven market for tube-based audio equipment that has survived every decade of solid-state advancement since the 1960s.

The GaN Revolution: The Last Major Frontier Falls

The most consequential ongoing displacement of vacuum tubes by solid-state devices is now playing out in satellite communications. For decades, TWTAs were effectively irreplaceable in high-power satellite transponders and ground-station uplink chains. No solid-state device could simultaneously achieve the power levels, frequency range, and efficiency needed for geostationary communications payloads operating in Ku-, Ka-, Q-, and V-bands.

Gallium nitride (GaN) semiconductor technology has changed that calculus. GaN's wide bandgap (~3.4 eV, versus silicon's ~1.1 eV) and high electron mobility allow GaN high-electron-mobility transistors (HEMTs) to operate efficiently at frequencies and power densities far beyond the reach of silicon or gallium arsenide devices. GaN-on-SiC and, increasingly, GaN-on-Si process nodes are enabling solid-state power amplifiers (SSPAs) to approach, and in some bands exceed, the performance of equivalent TWTA systems — while offering compelling advantages in reliability, lead time, cost, and operational flexibility.

Astranis and the Commercial Satellite Inflection Point

A notable inflection point came in April 2024, when satellite communications startup Astranis announced its next-generation Omega GEO satellite with a deliberate architectural decision: the company replaced the traditional traveling-wave tube power amplifiers with custom-designed solid-state power amplifiers. CEO John Gedmark stated publicly that the transition to SSPAs gave Astranis greater capability, flexibility, shorter lead times, and lower payload costs. The Omega satellite, targeting 50+ Gbps throughput, was set for first launch in 2026 — a commercial data point that the satellite industry noted carefully.

Filtronic, a UK-based RF components manufacturer, has demonstrated SSPAs operating at 81–86 GHz (E-band) using gallium arsenide semiconductors, achieving approximately 20 watts of output power — a threshold previously accessible only to TWT technology at those frequencies. The company is advancing toward a 100 W GaN amplifier operating at V-band (47.2–52.4 GHz) and beyond. Where TWTAs require stringent precision alignment and vacuum sealing — a manufacturing process that can require months per unit — SSPAs can be produced at scale using standard semiconductor fabrication techniques, with dramatically lower unit cost.

The ESA Magellan Program

At the research level, the European Space Agency launched the Magellan program in 2024, running through 2027, in partnership with the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State Physics (IAF), United Monolithic Semiconductors, and TESAT-Spacecom. The program's objective is the development of GaN-based HEMTs and amplifier monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs) with gate lengths below 100 nm, targeting highly efficient operation in Ka- (27–31 GHz), Q- (37.5–42.5 GHz), and W-band (71–76 GHz) for both LEO and GEO satellite applications. The program represents a major, publicly funded European commitment to the proposition that GaN will displace TWT technology across the satellite frequency spectrum within this decade.

Market Data: SSPAs on a Decisive Growth Trajectory

The commercial market reflects this trajectory. The global SSPA market was valued at approximately USD 588 million in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 989 million by 2032, a compound annual growth rate of 7.9%, according to Intel Market Research analysis published in December 2025. Growth drivers include satellite communication demand, military radar modernization, and 5G infrastructure expansion. The fundamental material advantage of GaN and GaAs over silicon — high bandgap combined with superior electron mobility — is enabling new performance thresholds that once belonged exclusively to thermionic devices.

Where Vacuum Tubes Remain Irreplaceable: Defense Electronics

Not every application is yielding to GaN. The U.S. Department of Defense has been explicit about this in its budget planning. In the FY2024 budget request, DARPA introduced the Vacuum Electronic Amplifiers for Millimeter-wave Power and Spectrum Superiority (VAMPS) program, requesting initial funding of $4 million. VAMPS is directed at developing compact, high-power RF amplifiers for electronic warfare systems — specifically, EW countermeasures against the next generation of millimeter-wave missile seeker threats. Critically, VAMPS does not propose replacing vacuum electronics with solid-state devices; it proposes integrating vacuum electronic amplifiers with solid-state pre-drivers to achieve a hybrid architecture that achieves breakthrough power and bandwidth in the millimeter-wave spectrum (above 75 GHz) where no pure solid-state solution is yet adequate.

This is precisely the pattern that has characterized the entire history of tube displacement: solid-state advances to the edge of what vacuum devices currently dominate, and the two technologies coexist in hybrid architectures while solid-state development continues pushing the frontier upward. DARPA's High Frequency Integrated Vacuum Electronics (HiFIVE) program explored microfabricated VED amplifiers for operation at millimeter-wave and sub-millimeter-wave frequencies, acknowledging that vacuum devices would continue to be the only viable option for high-power operation in the upper millimeter-wave spectrum for a considerable engineering horizon.

Particle Accelerators: A Niche Where the Transition Is Active but Not Complete

High-energy physics facilities provide another data point on the pace of displacement. At the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), researchers presented at the 2025 International Conference on Cyclotrons (Chengdu, China) an analysis of the transition from vacuum-tube-based high-power RF systems to solid-state architectures in wideband cyclotron applications. The INFN team, working on the K-800 superconducting cyclotron, documented the engineering challenges of achieving 20 kW continuous-wave output across the 10–90 MHz range in solid-state technology, noting that alarm signals about vacuum tube market sustainability had first appeared approximately a decade prior. Their hybrid configuration — solid-state combined with legacy tube components — illustrates a transition in progress that has not yet concluded even in laboratory environments specifically motivated to reduce tube dependency.

The Supply Chain Crisis and Its Implications

Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and the subsequent imposition of Western economic sanctions and Russian retaliatory export controls, produced an acute shock to the global vacuum tube supply chain that illustrates the persistent structural importance of thermionic devices in at least one consumer domain: audio.

The Russian export ban of March 2022 covered approximately 200 product categories, including vacuum tubes. At the time, the vast majority of audio amplifier tubes in active commercial supply were manufactured in Russia — specifically at a plant in Saratov operated under the New York–based company New Sensor Corporation, which marketed brands including Tung-Sol, Electro-Harmonix, EH Gold, Genalex Gold Lion, Mullard, Svetlana, and Sovtek. Electro-Harmonix founder Mike Matthews confirmed the ban publicly on 14 March 2022, noting that the situation was "ambiguous" and subject to change. Guitar retailers reported immediate demand surges and panic buying. Within hours of the ban's announcement, distributors rushed to purchase all available inventory because, as Manley Labs CEO EveAnna Manley described it, "no one knew what sanctions, banks, insurers, or carriers would allow the next day."

The crisis exposed a manufacturing structure of extraordinary fragility: effectively three global suppliers had been sustaining the entire commercial audio tube market. China's Shuguang factory — previously the world's largest audio tube producer — had closed in August 2019 to relocate to a larger facility; by 2022 it had not reopened, and key personnel had dispersed. JJ Electronic in Slovakia, the remaining large-scale European producer, had lead times of 14–18 months for popular types even before the Russian sanctions. Western Electric, the iconic American telecommunications manufacturer, had only recently resumed production of its celebrated 300B triode at its Rossville, Georgia facility and announced plans to expand to additional types. The American firm represented a tiny fraction of global supply capacity.

As of late 2025, the supply situation remained structurally fragile. Industry analyst reporting noted that factory closures, sanctions, and material shortages — both Russia and Ukraine are important suppliers of tube-manufacturing raw materials including specialized glass and refractory metals — have made tubes harder to produce and more expensive to ship across the board.

"The vacuum tube market hit a crisis point in early 2022. All of a sudden, vacuum tubes everywhere around the world disappeared overnight because everyone went and grabbed them."

EveAnna Manley, CEO, Manley Labs — quoted in Headphonesty, November 2025

A telling footnote to the supply crisis: by 2025, Guitar World and related trade publications were reporting that digital amplifier modelers had outsold traditional tube and solid-state amplifier and combo units in that year — the first time this milestone had been reached in the electric guitar instrument industry. The Russia-driven tube scarcity, and the resulting price escalation, may well have accelerated adoption of digital modeling technology among guitarists who might otherwise have remained loyal to tube amplification. Here, geopolitics may have accomplished what six decades of solid-state engineering advancement could not: pushing the last enthusiast holdouts toward transistors — and, in this case, digital signal processors.

From the VT Fuze to Guided Missiles — and Back Again: The Drone Swarm Economy

The VT proximity fuze's operational success raised an immediate postwar question: if a shell could be made smart enough to detonate near a target without direct contact, why not make the entire projectile guided? The answer, enabled by the same miniaturization revolution that displaced tubes from computing, was the radar-guided and infrared surface-to-air missile. Through the 1950s and beyond, guided missiles progressively supplanted gun-based anti-aircraft systems for most air defense roles. The Nike Ajax, Nike Hercules, Hawk, and eventually Patriot gave ground forces the ability to engage targets at ranges, altitudes, and closing speeds that gun systems could never reach. Naval surface-to-air missiles — the Terrier, Tartar, Talos series, and ultimately the Aegis SM-2 and SM-6 family — became the principal fleet air defense weapon. The VT fuze was not obsolete; it continued to be fitted to naval gunfire ammunition and field artillery rounds. But the fuze had been incorporated into a larger guided weapon, and the gun system itself was demoted from the primary air defense layer to a close-in last-ditch measure, exemplified by the 20mm M61 Vulcan-based Phalanx CIWS.

This transition assumed an implicit economic relationship: the target being defended is worth more than the interceptor consumed to protect it. A Patriot battery protecting a $500 million headquarters complex or an airbase against a $20 million cruise missile presents a reasonable cost exchange. The guided missile age was built on that assumption, and it held — until the rise of mass-produced, commercially derived attack drones broke it decisively.

The Cost Inversion: $4.2 Million Missiles Against $40,000 Drones

The combat experience of the Ukraine war and the U.S. Navy's extended engagement with Houthi forces in the Red Sea, beginning in late 2023, have together produced what defense analysts are now treating as a structural crisis in air defense economics. The Shahed-136, the Iranian-designed loitering munition fielded in enormous numbers by Russian forces against Ukrainian infrastructure, carries a 40-kilogram warhead, flies at roughly 185 kilometers per hour, and costs — depending on the production period and analytical method — somewhere between $20,000 and $80,000 per unit, with CSIS analysis using $35,000 as a median working figure. Against it, Ukraine has been compelled to expend interceptors including the IRIS-T SLM at approximately $450,000 per missile, and in some engagements, SM-2 and Patriot PAC-3 rounds at $2 million and $4.2 million respectively. The U.S. Navy, which by April 2024 had expended nearly $1 billion in interceptors against Houthi drones and missiles in the Red Sea — firing rounds that individually cost orders of magnitude more than the threats they killed — was described by the Secretary of the Navy as confronting a cost exchange ratio that was simply "not sustainable."

The scale of the threat production compounds the interceptor economics problem. Russia was launching 125–300 Shahed-type drones per day against Ukraine by mid-2025. Chinese manufacturers had reported orders approaching one million kamikaze drones for delivery within the year. A CNAS analysis titled "Countering the Swarm," published in September 2025, concluded that the United States faces a critical deficit in affordable-volume counter-drone solutions: producing 1,000 high-reliability interceptor missiles per month may not constitute a winning strategy if the adversary generates 5,000 drone sorties in the same period. The DoD's FY2026 budget requested $3.1 billion for counter-drone capabilities across the services — an acknowledgment that the problem is now an acquisition priority, not merely a capability gap.

"Using multi-million dollar Patriot and SM-2 missiles against Shaheds estimated to cost $20,000 to $40,000 each is undesirable. It is in affordable volume solutions that the U.S. and allies are presently most lacking."

Inside Unmanned Systems, "2025 Proved the Case for Drone Defense," January 2026, citing CNAS analysis

The Solid-State VT Fuze: Programmable Airburst Munitions as the Answer

The response emerging from the defense industry and from active combat experience in Ukraine is, at its conceptual core, the VT proximity fuze reborn in solid-state electronics — but with capabilities that Van Allen's hand-selected glass tubes could never have approached.

The Bofors 3P (Pre-fragmented, Programmable, Proximity-fused) round, produced by BAE Systems in 40mm and 57mm variants for the Bofors Mk4 and Mk3 naval gun systems and the Tridon land-based platform, is the most commercially mature example of the concept. Each 3P round is programmed inductively as it passes through the muzzle — the fire control computer continuously receives target track data, computes the optimal burst point, and writes the fuze setting electromagnetically during hammer-fall time, the interval between trigger pull and round exit. Six selectable modes include three proximity-fuze configurations for aerial targets, plus time fuze, impact, and delay. The round's pre-fragmented body disperses tungsten pellets in a lethal cone calibrated to the intercept geometry. Unit cost: approximately $27. Against a $35,000 Shahed, the favorable cost ratio is roughly 1,300 to one.

In Ukraine, the Tridon Mk2 system — a truck-mounted Bofors 40 Mk4 cannon — was deployed against Shahed drones with documented effectiveness. A 2025 analysis in the open defense press noted a cost-per-kill ratio approximately 185 times more favorable than a Patriot intercept against the same threat category. The Bofors system is not a replacement for Patriot against ballistic missiles or advanced aircraft; it is a lower-layer solution specifically suited to the slow, low-altitude, large-volume drone threat that guided missiles address at catastrophically adverse cost.

Rheinmetall's AHEAD (Advanced Hit Efficiency And Destruction) system provides a parallel solution for the 35mm caliber. AHEAD rounds carry 152 tungsten sub-projectiles in a time-programmed dispensing configuration. Each round is set at the muzzle by an electromagnetic induction unit, which computes the sub-projectile ejection time from the measured muzzle velocity and the target intercept geometry from the fire control system. The Oerlikon Revolver Gun Mk3 and the Skynex system — deployed to Ukraine beginning in 2024 — fire bursts of 24 AHEAD rounds at a rate of 1,000 rounds per minute to an effective range of approximately 4.5 kilometers. In a June 2021 test, Rheinmetall neutralized an eight-drone swarm with an 18-round burst; most targets were destroyed in the first six rounds. AHEAD is technically a programmable time fuze rather than a proximity fuze — the burst is triggered by elapsed time computed from muzzle velocity, not by target-reflected RF energy — but the operational function is identical to the VT fuze principle: the round detonates near the target rather than on contact with it.

In November 2025, the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command signaled a further extension of the concept by initiating a competitive solicitation for 40×53mm proximity-sensing airburst cartridges for the MK19 belt-fed automatic grenade launcher — a weapon introduced during the Vietnam War era. The initiative proposes fitting the seventy-year-old infantry weapon with advanced solid-state proximity fuze technology to create a low-cost counter-UAS capability at the squad and platoon level. The irony is precise: a weapon of the Vietnam era, combined with fuze technology that descends intellectually from the WWII VT fuze, addressed by solid-state electronics that did not exist when either was designed.

Technology Lineage: From Van Allen's Glass Tubes to MEMS and SoCs

The engineering contrast between the 1942 VT fuze and its contemporary descendants illuminates exactly what the solid-state transition accomplished in this domain. James Van Allen required nearly a year of iterative development to produce five miniature glass vacuum tubes capable of surviving 20,000g and 28,000 rpm inside a 5-inch shell. The complete fuze assembly occupied most of the nose volume of the projectile, required a specially activated battery to power the filaments under setback conditions, and cost $732 per unit in 1942 production. The electronics were permanently fixed at manufacture; no programming was possible.

The Bofors 3P fuze contains an ASIC-based processor, MEMS inertial sensors, a solid-state RF proximity detector, and a programmable firing circuit — all in a package that occupies a fraction of the volume of Van Allen's five-tube assembly, survives the same or greater mechanical environments without active filaments or glass envelopes, draws milliwatts from a battery activated by the firing setback, and is individually programmed by the fire control system in the microseconds between trigger pull and muzzle exit. The round costs $27. Moore's Law, applied to sensors and microcontrollers as thoroughly as to computing, delivered an engineering outcome that the wartime tube designers would have recognized in principle — detonate the shell near the target without hitting it — while making the implementation essentially unrecognizable in physical form.

The strategic picture that emerges from this genealogy is sobering. The drone swarm threat has exposed an air defense portfolio gap that cannot be closed by the guided missile architecture that displaced gun systems over the past seventy years. The economic solution — high-volume, low-cost, cannon-fired proximity munitions — is a direct conceptual descendant of the most sophisticated thermionic engineering achievement of the Second World War, now realized in solid-state electronics. The tube-to-transistor transition enabled this round to exist and to cost $27 rather than $732. The operational problem that prompted the original VT fuze remains unsolved in a different form, in a different century, against a different class of threat — and the electronic descendants of Van Allen's tubes are, again, part of the answer.

A Structural Assessment: Why Displacement Takes Decades

The seventy-five-year history of tube displacement illustrates several principles of technology transition that merit explicit articulation for engineers and technology policy analysts.

Performance Frontiers Are Not Fixed

Each solid-state advance does not instantly obsolete the entire tube domain; it captures the sub-threshold portion of the domain — the applications where tubes no longer offer a decisive advantage — while leaving the performance frontier applications intact. SSPAs have displaced TWTAs in low-frequency, low-power satellite applications for decades. They have only recently begun displacing TWTAs at the power and frequency combinations previously considered TWT-exclusive. The frontier has moved continuously upward, and VED manufacturers have pursued it, making tubes simultaneously more capable in their strongholds as those strongholds progressively contracted.

Manufacturing Economics, Not Physics, Drive Most Transitions

In most of the consumer applications that tubes surrendered between the 1950s and 1980s, the tube was not technically inferior at the moment of displacement. It was economically uncompetitive. Photolithographic semiconductor manufacturing allowed solid-state devices to decrease in cost, size, and power consumption along a trajectory that thermionic devices — which require glass or ceramic envelopes, precision electrode assembly, vacuum sealing, and materials including thoriated tungsten and barium oxides — could not follow. This economic reality, not a sudden technical inferiority, drove the consumer transition.

Supply Chain Concentration Creates Systemic Risk

The 2022 Russian tube export crisis demonstrated that concentrating a technology's manufacturing base in geopolitically exposed locations — regardless of whether that technology is considered "legacy" — creates systemic risk for downstream industries. The vacuum tube supply chain serves not only audiophiles and guitarists but also military legacy systems, research instruments, broadcast transmitters, and medical linear accelerators that have not yet completed their own solid-state transitions.

Thermionic Physics Still Defies Substitution at the Extreme Frontier

At power levels above hundreds of watts and frequencies above 10 GHz, the combination of physics and manufacturing reality sustains TWT and klystron technology with no credible solid-state replacement on the near horizon for the highest-demand applications. DARPA's explicit acknowledgment of this fact in its FY24 budget — requesting funds not to replace VEDs with solid-state devices but to integrate the two in hybrid architectures — is the clearest official statement of this reality.

Conclusion: A Transition Still in Progress

The semiconductor industry has achieved one of the most dramatic technology transitions in human history, compressing billion-transistor logic into millimeter-scale chips and reducing the cost of computation by orders of magnitude over seven decades. Against that backdrop, the persistence of the vacuum tube is not a failure of solid-state technology but evidence of how demanding the tube's remaining strongholds truly are.

A GaN SSPA that can replace a TWT aboard a commercial satellite in 2024 represents an engineering achievement commensurate with anything that preceded it in the tube-to-transistor transition. Yet in the millimeter-wave electronic warfare bands above 75 GHz, and in the extreme-power UHF and microwave applications served by klystrons, the tube endures — not from institutional inertia but from physical necessity. The DARPA VAMPS program is not a monument to engineering nostalgia; it is an acknowledgment that free electrons in vacuum, interacting with carefully designed slow-wave electromagnetic structures, remain the most effective known mechanism for generating high-power coherent radiation at frequencies where adversary missile seekers operate.

Seventy-five years after Shockley called the transistor a magnificent Christmas present, the vacuum tube — invented in its modern triode form by Lee de Forest in 1906, matured across a century of engineering, battered by geopolitics and supply chain disruption, displaced across domain after domain by semiconductor physics and photolithographic economics — refuses to deliver its own eulogy. The long goodbye continues.


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Prepared in the analytical style of IEEE Spectrum · Research current through May 2026 · Pseudo Publius Research & Analysis

 

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