Türkiye’s ZD300 Drone Carrier Could Expand NATO FPV Strike Operations with Six Merkut Drones
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Türkiye’s Zyrone Dynamics unveiled at SAHA Expo 2026 in Istanbul a new ZD 300 drone carrier armed with six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones, signaling a shift toward layered unmanned warfare built for contested battlefields. The system combines aerial logistics with precision strike capability, giving NATO-style forces a way to supply dispersed units and launch attacks while reducing operator exposure to artillery, drones, and electronic warfare.
The ZD300 carries and deploys six AI-assisted Merkut strike drones with GNSS-independent targeting and day/night attack capability, turning a logistics UAV into a mobile precision-strike platform. The concept reflects a broader battlefield trend toward affordable drone mass, autonomous operations, and survivable dispersed warfare.
Related Topic: STM Executes Türkiye’s First Live-Fire Drone Swarm Using 20 KARGU Loitering Munitions
Zyrone Dynamics unveiled at SAHA Expo 2026 in Istanbul a new ZD 300 drone carrier configuration capable of deploying six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones for contested logistics and precision strike missions (Picture Source: Army Recognition Group)
Türkiye’s Zyrone Dynamics unveiled at SAHA Expo 2026 in Istanbul a new ZD 300 configuration carrying six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones, presenting a Turkish unmanned concept that links aerial logistics with distributed precision strike. By combining a 30 kg-class logistics UAV with multiple compact strike drones, the system introduces a new carrier-drone approach that could be relevant for Türkiye, NATO, and U.S.-aligned forces facing contested logistics, electronic warfare, and dispersed battlefield operations.
The ZD300 was originally developed by Zyrone Dynamics as a logistics unmanned aerial vehicle designed to move beyond the limitations of last-mile delivery. The platform is presented with a maximum payload capacity of 30 kg and a payload volume limit of 30 liters, allowing it to transport military supplies, equipment, sensors, ammunition packages, or specialized mission payloads. The UAV has a compact structure, measuring approximately 1.3 meters in length and 1.3 meters in width, while its monocoque carbon-fiber body and 42-inch carbon-fiber propellers underline its focus on weight reduction, structural rigidity, and operational endurance. With a 30 kg payload capacity and a compact carbon-fiber structure, the ZD 300 offers a balance between load-carrying capability and deployability, which is particularly important for units operating away from major bases or conventional road networks.
According to information released for the ZD 300, the platform can fly at a maximum speed of 75 km/h and operate up to 4,000 meters above mean sea level or 1,000 meters above ground level. Its endurance exceeds 75 minutes without payload at sea level, while its resistance to Beaufort 6 wind conditions allows it to operate in more demanding weather environments. The platform is powered by a solid-state LiPo 14S battery and is designed to operate in temperatures ranging from -15°C to +55°C. These characteristics make the ZD 300 suitable not only for conventional military logistics, but also for mountain operations, border security missions, expeditionary deployments, island defense scenarios, and forward resupply operations where helicopters, ground convoys, or manned vehicles may face elevated risks.
The integration of six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones gives the ZD 300 a combat role that goes beyond transport. Instead of functioning only as a cargo UAV, the platform becomes an airborne tactical carrier capable of moving several compact strike drones closer to the operational area. This creates a layered Turkish unmanned architecture: the ZD 300 provides mobility, endurance, payload transport, and route autonomy, while the Merkut drones provide the terminal precision effect. Such a concept could allow operators to keep launch teams farther from exposed terrain, reducing risks from artillery, counter-drone surveillance, ambushes, mines, and direct fire. For NATO forces, this type of architecture could be useful in missions where small units need to engage mobile targets, observation posts, lightly protected vehicles, or enemy positions without pushing personnel into vulnerable launch areas.
The Merkut element is central to the originality of this configuration. The Merkut is described as an FPV kamikaze UAV solution developed for modern conflict environments and asymmetric threats. SAVX presents the Merkut E/O as a system able to operate by day and night, including under electronic warfare conditions. The drone has a 2.5 kg take-off weight, a stated range of 10 km, and an endurance of 20 minutes when loaded or 30 minutes without load. Its cruise speed is listed at 90 km/h, with a maximum speed of 144 km/h, an operational altitude of 3,500 ft AGL, a maximum altitude of 15,000 ft MSL, and a deployment time of less than three minutes. These characteristics make the Merkut suitable for rapid tactical engagements in environments where speed, operator control, and compact dimensions are essential.
The Merkut E/O also brings a more capable guidance and target engagement package than many improvised FPV drones currently seen on battlefields. The system can be equipped with digital or analog camera options, EO day optics, or IR thermal imaging. It also includes real-time image processing, operator-assisted or AI-assisted target detection, visual lock-on, autonomous tracking after lock, and the possibility for the operator to reselect a target during flight. Its GNSS-independent capability is especially relevant in electronic warfare environments, where satellite navigation may be degraded, jammed, or denied. In this role, Merkut is not merely a disposable FPV drone, but a compact guided strike asset that can be carried and positioned by a larger unmanned platform such as the ZD 300.
Merkut is listed with a 1 kg payload capacity, with a maximum payload of 2.5 kg, and uses an anti-personnel directional munition containing 1,000 steel balls of 3 mm. The stated effect radius is 20 meters, while the fuze system includes five-stage mechanical and electronic safety features, proximity triggering, manual triggering, impact triggering, and adjustable detonation distance from 0.5 to 12 meters. These features show that the Merkut has been designed with controlled effects, safety mechanisms, and battlefield adaptability in mind. When carried in groups of six by the ZD 300, the system could provide several individual precision effects from a single airborne carrier, offering tactical commanders more flexibility than a single heavier munition.
Compared with standard FPV kamikaze drones launched directly from the ground, the ZD 300–Merkut configuration offers a broader tactical envelope. A conventional FPV team must often deploy near the line of contact to preserve range and target access, increasing exposure to enemy observation, electronic warfare, artillery, and small-arms fire. By using the ZD 300 as an airborne carrier, Turkish industry is proposing a way to preserve the low-cost and high-precision advantages of FPV drones while increasing launch flexibility and reducing operator risk. The ZD 300’s 15 km telemetry line-of-sight datalink, LTE option, GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, RTK support, and non-GNSS option further strengthen its relevance for operations in degraded or contested environments.
The platform’s autonomous functions also support its potential military role. The ZD 300’s autonomous flight suite includes waypoint navigation, fail-safe modes, return-to-home, automatic take-off and landing, and collision avoidance. These features could allow the ZD 300 to perform repeatable resupply routes, autonomous transit toward forward operating areas, sensor delivery, emergency medical supply transport, or controlled deployment of carried payloads. Its softcase or hardcase carrying options provide additional flexibility, while its MIL-STD-810G environmental certification indicates that the system has been designed for demanding operating conditions. In NATO terms, this type of UAV could contribute to contested logistics, a growing priority as allied forces prepare for operations where roads, depots, convoys, and forward bases may be under constant observation or attack.
For NATO and U.S.-aligned forces, the ZD 300 carrying six Merkut FPV kamikaze drones could answer two operational problems at the same time: how to supply dispersed units and how to deliver affordable precision effects without relying exclusively on larger aircraft, artillery, or expensive missile systems. The system could support rapid reaction forces, special operations teams, forward reconnaissance units, border security missions, and littoral defense operations. In Eastern Europe, the Black Sea region, the Eastern Mediterranean, or mountainous theaters, a carrier drone capable of transporting supplies or deploying compact FPV strike drones could help allied forces operate with greater dispersion and lower logistical exposure. This is especially relevant as NATO countries study the lessons of Ukraine, where unmanned systems have reshaped reconnaissance, strike missions, and the survivability of small units.
The strategic implication for Türkiye is also significant. The ZD 300–Merkut combination shows that Turkish defense companies are no longer focused only on producing individual UAVs, but are increasingly building complete unmanned warfare concepts. Zyrone Dynamics contributes the carrier and logistics architecture, while Titra and SAVX-linked Merkut capabilities add the strike component. This reflects a broader national strength: Türkiye’s ability to combine drone engineering, compact munitions, autonomy, electro-optical systems, and operational lessons into exportable solutions. For NATO, this makes Türkiye not only a drone supplier, but also a source of practical concepts for the future battlefield.
The ZD 300 carrying six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones marks an important step in Türkiye’s evolution from drone producer to unmanned warfare architect. By linking a 30 kg-class logistics UAV with several compact guided strike drones, Zyrone Dynamics and its Turkish industrial partners are presenting a system that can move supplies, extend FPV reach, reduce operator exposure, and deliver multiple precision effects from a single airborne platform. For Türkiye, it reinforces the depth and adaptability of its domestic defense ecosystem. For NATO, it offers a practical Turkish solution for missions shaped by contested logistics, electronic warfare, dispersed units, and the growing need for affordable unmanned mass.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.
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Türkiye’s Zyrone Dynamics unveiled at SAHA Expo 2026 in Istanbul a new ZD 300 drone carrier armed with six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones, signaling a shift toward layered unmanned warfare built for contested battlefields. The system combines aerial logistics with precision strike capability, giving NATO-style forces a way to supply dispersed units and launch attacks while reducing operator exposure to artillery, drones, and electronic warfare.
The ZD300 carries and deploys six AI-assisted Merkut strike drones with GNSS-independent targeting and day/night attack capability, turning a logistics UAV into a mobile precision-strike platform. The concept reflects a broader battlefield trend toward affordable drone mass, autonomous operations, and survivable dispersed warfare.
Related Topic: STM Executes Türkiye’s First Live-Fire Drone Swarm Using 20 KARGU Loitering Munitions
Zyrone Dynamics unveiled at SAHA Expo 2026 in Istanbul a new ZD 300 drone carrier configuration capable of deploying six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones for contested logistics and precision strike missions (Picture Source: Army Recognition Group)
Türkiye’s Zyrone Dynamics unveiled at SAHA Expo 2026 in Istanbul a new ZD 300 configuration carrying six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones, presenting a Turkish unmanned concept that links aerial logistics with distributed precision strike. By combining a 30 kg-class logistics UAV with multiple compact strike drones, the system introduces a new carrier-drone approach that could be relevant for Türkiye, NATO, and U.S.-aligned forces facing contested logistics, electronic warfare, and dispersed battlefield operations.
The ZD300 was originally developed by Zyrone Dynamics as a logistics unmanned aerial vehicle designed to move beyond the limitations of last-mile delivery. The platform is presented with a maximum payload capacity of 30 kg and a payload volume limit of 30 liters, allowing it to transport military supplies, equipment, sensors, ammunition packages, or specialized mission payloads. The UAV has a compact structure, measuring approximately 1.3 meters in length and 1.3 meters in width, while its monocoque carbon-fiber body and 42-inch carbon-fiber propellers underline its focus on weight reduction, structural rigidity, and operational endurance. With a 30 kg payload capacity and a compact carbon-fiber structure, the ZD 300 offers a balance between load-carrying capability and deployability, which is particularly important for units operating away from major bases or conventional road networks.
According to information released for the ZD 300, the platform can fly at a maximum speed of 75 km/h and operate up to 4,000 meters above mean sea level or 1,000 meters above ground level. Its endurance exceeds 75 minutes without payload at sea level, while its resistance to Beaufort 6 wind conditions allows it to operate in more demanding weather environments. The platform is powered by a solid-state LiPo 14S battery and is designed to operate in temperatures ranging from -15°C to +55°C. These characteristics make the ZD 300 suitable not only for conventional military logistics, but also for mountain operations, border security missions, expeditionary deployments, island defense scenarios, and forward resupply operations where helicopters, ground convoys, or manned vehicles may face elevated risks.
The integration of six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones gives the ZD 300 a combat role that goes beyond transport. Instead of functioning only as a cargo UAV, the platform becomes an airborne tactical carrier capable of moving several compact strike drones closer to the operational area. This creates a layered Turkish unmanned architecture: the ZD 300 provides mobility, endurance, payload transport, and route autonomy, while the Merkut drones provide the terminal precision effect. Such a concept could allow operators to keep launch teams farther from exposed terrain, reducing risks from artillery, counter-drone surveillance, ambushes, mines, and direct fire. For NATO forces, this type of architecture could be useful in missions where small units need to engage mobile targets, observation posts, lightly protected vehicles, or enemy positions without pushing personnel into vulnerable launch areas.
The Merkut element is central to the originality of this configuration. The Merkut is described as an FPV kamikaze UAV solution developed for modern conflict environments and asymmetric threats. SAVX presents the Merkut E/O as a system able to operate by day and night, including under electronic warfare conditions. The drone has a 2.5 kg take-off weight, a stated range of 10 km, and an endurance of 20 minutes when loaded or 30 minutes without load. Its cruise speed is listed at 90 km/h, with a maximum speed of 144 km/h, an operational altitude of 3,500 ft AGL, a maximum altitude of 15,000 ft MSL, and a deployment time of less than three minutes. These characteristics make the Merkut suitable for rapid tactical engagements in environments where speed, operator control, and compact dimensions are essential.
The Merkut E/O also brings a more capable guidance and target engagement package than many improvised FPV drones currently seen on battlefields. The system can be equipped with digital or analog camera options, EO day optics, or IR thermal imaging. It also includes real-time image processing, operator-assisted or AI-assisted target detection, visual lock-on, autonomous tracking after lock, and the possibility for the operator to reselect a target during flight. Its GNSS-independent capability is especially relevant in electronic warfare environments, where satellite navigation may be degraded, jammed, or denied. In this role, Merkut is not merely a disposable FPV drone, but a compact guided strike asset that can be carried and positioned by a larger unmanned platform such as the ZD 300.
Merkut is listed with a 1 kg payload capacity, with a maximum payload of 2.5 kg, and uses an anti-personnel directional munition containing 1,000 steel balls of 3 mm. The stated effect radius is 20 meters, while the fuze system includes five-stage mechanical and electronic safety features, proximity triggering, manual triggering, impact triggering, and adjustable detonation distance from 0.5 to 12 meters. These features show that the Merkut has been designed with controlled effects, safety mechanisms, and battlefield adaptability in mind. When carried in groups of six by the ZD 300, the system could provide several individual precision effects from a single airborne carrier, offering tactical commanders more flexibility than a single heavier munition.
Compared with standard FPV kamikaze drones launched directly from the ground, the ZD 300–Merkut configuration offers a broader tactical envelope. A conventional FPV team must often deploy near the line of contact to preserve range and target access, increasing exposure to enemy observation, electronic warfare, artillery, and small-arms fire. By using the ZD 300 as an airborne carrier, Turkish industry is proposing a way to preserve the low-cost and high-precision advantages of FPV drones while increasing launch flexibility and reducing operator risk. The ZD 300’s 15 km telemetry line-of-sight datalink, LTE option, GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, RTK support, and non-GNSS option further strengthen its relevance for operations in degraded or contested environments.
The platform’s autonomous functions also support its potential military role. The ZD 300’s autonomous flight suite includes waypoint navigation, fail-safe modes, return-to-home, automatic take-off and landing, and collision avoidance. These features could allow the ZD 300 to perform repeatable resupply routes, autonomous transit toward forward operating areas, sensor delivery, emergency medical supply transport, or controlled deployment of carried payloads. Its softcase or hardcase carrying options provide additional flexibility, while its MIL-STD-810G environmental certification indicates that the system has been designed for demanding operating conditions. In NATO terms, this type of UAV could contribute to contested logistics, a growing priority as allied forces prepare for operations where roads, depots, convoys, and forward bases may be under constant observation or attack.
For NATO and U.S.-aligned forces, the ZD 300 carrying six Merkut FPV kamikaze drones could answer two operational problems at the same time: how to supply dispersed units and how to deliver affordable precision effects without relying exclusively on larger aircraft, artillery, or expensive missile systems. The system could support rapid reaction forces, special operations teams, forward reconnaissance units, border security missions, and littoral defense operations. In Eastern Europe, the Black Sea region, the Eastern Mediterranean, or mountainous theaters, a carrier drone capable of transporting supplies or deploying compact FPV strike drones could help allied forces operate with greater dispersion and lower logistical exposure. This is especially relevant as NATO countries study the lessons of Ukraine, where unmanned systems have reshaped reconnaissance, strike missions, and the survivability of small units.
The strategic implication for Türkiye is also significant. The ZD 300–Merkut combination shows that Turkish defense companies are no longer focused only on producing individual UAVs, but are increasingly building complete unmanned warfare concepts. Zyrone Dynamics contributes the carrier and logistics architecture, while Titra and SAVX-linked Merkut capabilities add the strike component. This reflects a broader national strength: Türkiye’s ability to combine drone engineering, compact munitions, autonomy, electro-optical systems, and operational lessons into exportable solutions. For NATO, this makes Türkiye not only a drone supplier, but also a source of practical concepts for the future battlefield.
The ZD 300 carrying six Titra Merkut FPV kamikaze drones marks an important step in Türkiye’s evolution from drone producer to unmanned warfare architect. By linking a 30 kg-class logistics UAV with several compact guided strike drones, Zyrone Dynamics and its Turkish industrial partners are presenting a system that can move supplies, extend FPV reach, reduce operator exposure, and deliver multiple precision effects from a single airborne platform. For Türkiye, it reinforces the depth and adaptability of its domestic defense ecosystem. For NATO, it offers a practical Turkish solution for missions shaped by contested logistics, electronic warfare, dispersed units, and the growing need for affordable unmanned mass.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.
