-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- pcb007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueThe Hole Truth: Via Integrity in an HDI World
From the drilled hole to registration across multiple sequential lamination cycles, to the quality of your copper plating, via reliability in an HDI world is becoming an ever-greater challenge. This month we look at “The Hole Truth,” from creating the “perfect” via to how you can assure via quality and reliability, the first time, every time.
In Pursuit of Perfection: Defect Reduction
For bare PCB board fabrication, defect reduction is a critical aspect of a company's bottom line profitability. In this issue, we examine how imaging, etching, and plating processes can provide information and insight into reducing defects and increasing yields.
Voices of the Industry
We take the pulse of the PCB industry by sharing insights from leading fabricators and suppliers in this month's issue. We've gathered their thoughts on the new U.S. administration, spending, the war in Ukraine, and their most pressing needs. It’s an eye-opening and enlightening look behind the curtain.
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - pcb007 Magazine
Gecko Robotics Continues to Expand U.S. Navy Work Around Columbia Class Production and Surface Fleet Availability
September 4, 2024 | BUSINESS WIREEstimated reading time: 2 minutes

Gecko Robotics, the company pioneering the use of AI and robotics to change how organizations build, operate and maintain their most critical infrastructure, announced an expansion of its work with the U.S. Navy’s surface fleet and the continued growth of its partnership with the Columbia-class submarine program. The Navy has increased the use of Gecko on surface ships by 400% in 2024 and has expanded its scope to include aircraft carriers, with the first vessel scheduled for this fall.
The expansion with the $132 billion Columbia-class program represents a continuation of Gecko’s work on the nuclear-powered submarines that was announced last fall, building on the maintenance support for Virginia-class submarines.
“We’re proud to grow our partnership with the Navy around keeping ships in the fight and increasing the pace of production on the Columbia,” said Jake Loosararian, Co-founder and CEO of Gecko Robotics. “Making sure the brave men and women of the U.S. Navy have the tools they need to perform their vital missions safely and effectively is the perfect example of what our team wakes up every morning focused on.”
According to the Navy data, Gecko is significantly reducing the lead time and work hours associated with maintenance cycles while increasing the availability of data and finding defects missing through traditional methods. For example, for one Navy asset, traditional methods captured less than 100 data points on key vital defense structures while Gecko’s platform captured more than 4.2 million.
Gecko will support the manufacturing and construction process of the Columbia-class nuclear submarines by using advanced robotics to collect an unprecedented level of structural data. The company will be able to help identify and predict problem areas in the build process that could create substantial delays. Gecko will also help the Navy build a digital baseline on critical parts of the program to help predict how the maritime environment will impact the submarine and when in-service maintenance will be required.
Gecko has been deployed across the U.S. Navy surface fleet since 2023 to help decrease maintenance delays and enable better planning. The company will begin work on its first aircraft carrier this fall and utilize their fleet of robots and fixed sensors to gather incredibly granular data on the health of the Navy’s vessels. That data is then fed into Gecko’s AI-powered operations platform, Cantilever, to help substantially reduce growth work, maintenance timelines and help the ships get back to sea faster.
The new deals cement Gecko’s role in building and maintaining critical defense assets that support both national and global security. It also makes the U.S. Navy a pioneer in using the very latest technology to reduce delays and unexpected maintenance for its fleet - a challenge faced by countries around the world.
Suggested Items
Sypris Receives New Award Under Electronic Warfare Program
06/11/2025 | BUSINESS WIRESypris Electronics, LLC, a subsidiary of Sypris Solutions, Inc., announced it has received a follow-on award to support continued production of critical electronic assemblies first announced in 2022.
RTX's Raytheon Awarded $646M Hardware Production and Sustainment Contract for SPY-6 Family of Radars
06/10/2025 | RTXRaytheon, an RTX business, was awarded a $646 million contract to continue producing AN/SPY-6(V) radars for the U.S. Navy. This is the fourth option exercised from the March 2022 hardware, production and sustainment contract that is valued up to $3 billion over five years.
Stephen Winchell Appointed DARPA Director
06/02/2025 | DARPAStephen Winchell was sworn in today as the 24th director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
CACI’s Mission-Critical Technology will Accelerate the Delivery of Electronic Warfighting Capabilities to the U.S. Navy’s Existing Fleet
05/13/2025 | CACI International Inc.CACI International Inc announced today that it has been awarded additional work by the U.S. Navy to procure enhancements to the current fielded Shipboard Information Warfare Exploit system under its existing contract for Spectral, a next-generation shipboard signals intelligence (SIGINT), electronic warfare (EW), and information operations (IO) weapon system.
CACI Awarded $66 Million Task Order to Provide Expertise to U.S. Navy Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC)
04/08/2025 | CACI International Inc.CACI International Inc announced that it has been awarded a five-year task order valued at up to $66 million to continue providing expertise to the U.S. Navy’s Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) Carderock Division.