Archer acquires assets from Overair, Mission Critical Composites
Aiming to accelerate its defense aircraft portfolio, acquisitions include a patent portfolio from tiltrotor aircraft specialist Overair, and a composites manufacturing site.
Aiming to bring composites capabilities in-house, Archer has acquired a Southern California manufacturing facility from Mission Critical Composites. Source | Archer
(Santa Clara, Calif., U.S.) announces two acquisitions aimed at accelerating the development of its next-generation defense aircraft:
- a patent portfolio and critical employees from Overair, a spin-off of Karem Aircraft, and
- key composites manufacturing assets and an approximately 60,000-square-foot manufacturing facility from Mission Critical Composites, a specialized defense composite manufacturer in Huntington Beach, Calif.
These acquisitions build on Archer’s December 2024 announcement of a strategic partnership with Anduril to co-develop hybrid, autonomous, vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) military aircraft, followed by $1.3 billion in capital raised to pursue both defense and commercial opportunities. Since its December announcement, Archer says it continues to see growing demand from major allied defense programs worldwide.
The acquired Mission Critical Composites facility enables Archer to bring core composite fabrication capabilities in-house, supporting its defense program needs for rapid prototyping and iteration. Karem Aircraft developed and manufactured advanced fixed-wing and rotary-wing aircraft focused on the use of high-efficiency tiltrotors (including Overair’s Butterfly prototype).
Archer says that both acquisitions come on the heels of a of a budget request allocation by the Pentagon of $13.4 billion for autonomous military systems.
Adam Goldstein, founder and CEO of Archer, says, “The Administration has made it clear: Leading in advanced aviation in both commercial and defense is a national priority. These acquisitions are part of our commitment — we’re working to accelerate our product development to meet our country’s needs.”
Related Content
-
Midnight production aircraft completes full transition flight
This is Archer’s second full-scale eVTOL aircraft to achieve this milestone, critical to being able to carry commercially viable passenger payloads.
-
Joby conducts FAA testing, moves into final certification
Successful static loading testing of tail structure and Type Inspection Authorization by FAA pilots moves Joby closer to its 2025 targets.
-
Archer Aviation signs eVTOL aircraft purchase with Japan
Japan Airlines’ and Sumitomo’s joint venture company intends to purchase up to 100 Midnight aircraft to certify and commercialize AAM services across Japan.