Configurable Payload Systems
Highlights
Rapidly develop and deploy configurable payload systems—traditional methods were too slow to meet mission timelines.
Developed a parametric model for rapid concept iteration and engaged multi-supplier activation for rapid production.
Multiple flight-ready units demonstrated at an Army xTech event—2 weeks from concept to flight.
Background
Nantrak Industries develops payload systems for defense applications where mission requirements change faster than traditional hardware development can respond. The company needed a design and manufacturing partner that could match the pace of operational planning—delivering flight-ready hardware in weeks rather than the months or years typical of conventional defense procurement.
The Challenge
Traditional payload system development requires sequential design cycles, prototype tooling, and single-source manufacturing—a process that typically takes months from concept to flight-ready hardware. When mission requirements change mid-development, the process often restarts from the beginning. Nantrak needed a fundamentally different approach that could compress development timelines while maintaining the structural and environmental performance required for flight operations.
Our Approach
General Lattice developed a parametric model that captured the key design variables and constraints for the payload system family. This model enabled rapid concept iteration—generating and evaluating design variants in hours rather than weeks. When a configuration met performance requirements, the manufacturing package was generated directly from the parametric model and distributed across a qualified supplier network for production.
The multi-supplier activation strategy meant that production capacity could scale with demand, and manufacturing was not dependent on a single source. Each supplier received a standardized manufacturing package that ensured consistent quality regardless of production location.
The Outcome
General Lattice delivered multiple flight-ready payload system units that were demonstrated at an Army xTech event—just two weeks from initial concept to flight-ready hardware. The parametric model remains active, enabling Nantrak to generate new configurations as mission requirements evolve without re-engineering from scratch.
This project demonstrated the full potential of combining computational design with distributed digital manufacturing: rapid iteration, on-demand production, and supply chain resilience—all critical requirements for defense applications.
Ready to start a project?
Tell us about your requirements and we'll explore how GL Defense can help.
Contact Our Defense Team