Teledyne Marine Systems News

Next-Gen AI Capability for Teledyne Gavia AUVs

the surface, download its data, and then send it back down for further investigation (if necessary). With Teledyne Gavia, we offer our customers a better experience, giving them confidence that the area is clear and it’s safe to operate.”Bob Melvin, Vice President of Engineering at Teledyne Marine Systems, added, “Our customers have been asking us for a reliable way to carry out seafloor surveys, such as mine hunting. AutoTRap Onboard makes finding these targets of interest much easier and builds higher levels of confidence in AI systems.”AutoTRap Onboard has demonstrated excellent

“We are moving autonomous technologies into vehicles that have always been "remotely operated" or even manned to realize more efficiency and capability.  We are really blurring the lines between "ROV" and "AUV" and minimizing the technical difference between manned and unmanned. ”
Ben Kinnaman, CEO, Greensea Systems, Inc."

Subsea: The Future of Unmanned Vehicles

at Rice University moderated by the Subsea Systems Institute where major oil & gas companies, their providers, and underwater vehicle manufactures spent the day generating a development strategy for AUVs for subsea applications,” said Bob Melvin, the Vice President of Engineering at Teledyne Marine Systems.  “Their number one requests was to make underwater systems that can perform subsea tasks.  To reach this goal there is acknowledgement that the commercial sector will need to leverage advances made in the defense sector.  But for this to become reality, operators need

Photo: UTEC

UTEC Survey, Teledyne Gavia Improve AUV Capabilities

Marine System’s Vice President of Engineering Bob Melvin added, “The recent deep water tests in San Diego highlight Teledyne’s commitment to our commercial customers and provide vital feedback to our engineering and field support teams.”    “At Teledyne Marine Systems we value our customers input and participation in our development process and realize that only by closely aligning stakeholder objectives from manufacturers, service providers and operating companies can we be ultimately successful.” 

“Many would agree that the ocean is a highly under sampled environment. We see our role as facilitating good decision-making by providing the instruments and platforms that allow society to collect as much accurate and quantitative data as possible, at as low of a cost as possible in order to facilitate more informed decision making.”  Bill Kikendall Teledyne Marine Sensors & Systems Group

MTR100: Teledyne Marine Sensors & Systems (PART I)

for some of those bigger programs.” •    Teledyne Dalsa in Canada, with an expertise in MEMS. “It is potentially a great partner for us as we look at MEMS-based sensor technologies in the future and how those might apply into our various business units.” Teledyne Marine Systems Teledyne Marine Systems enables customer optimized data collection with the most comprehensive and innovative suite of undersea vehicles and infrastructure available. The portfolio includes low logistics high performance unmanned marine vehicles, sensor agnostic towed systems, undersea

Photo: Teledyne SeaBotix

Teledyne SeaBotix Opens ROV Service Facility

Teledyne SeaBotix, a manufacturer of remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), including the LBV and vLBV lines, announced today the phased opening of a service support and repair facility within its parent organization, Teledyne Marine Systems, which is located in North Falmouth, Mass.   Dr. Thomas Altshuler, Teledyne Marine Systems Vice President and Group General Manager, said,  "We are pleased to geographically extend our world class service and support to enhance response capability and reduce maintenance and repair turn-around times."   The SeaBotix service and repair

VideoRay performed in one of the most historic salvage  operations ever; the set-up for the removal of Costa Concordia.

ROV Roundtable: Market Experts Weigh In

The evolution of capable Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs) moves in tandem with a burgeoning array of missions available. This month MTR spoke with Matt Bates of Saab Seaeye, Chris Gibson of Videoray, and Alasdair Murrie and Peter Ranelli from Teledyne Marine Systems for their insights on the market moving forward. Describe the trajectory of ROV use over the past five years.      Bates, Saab Seaeye We have found a growing demand amongst operators in the oil and gas industry for ROVs with greater work and survey capability. This has led us to extend our range into larger and

Image: SeaBotix

Teledyne Marine Systems Welcomes SeaBotix

The Teledyne Marine Systems group, providers of undersea vehicles and subsea infrastructure, announced that SeaBotix, part of the recent Bolt Technology Corporation acquisition by parent company Teledyne Technologies Incorporated, will join the Marine Systems group of companies.   SeaBotix is a manufacturer of underwater observation class MiniROVs designed to perform a multitude of tasks that include maritime security, search and recovery, hull, pipeline and infrastructure inspection, hazardous environment intervention, aquaculture, sensor deployment, oceanographic research, nuclear applications

Photo: DOF Subsea North America

Slocum G2 Gliders Delivered to DOF Subsea

and therefore we believe that this type of platform has a bright future within DOF Subsea and the oil and gas industry. Two of our vehicles are already committed on a long term project and we look forward to expanding our operations to suit market conditions.” Arnar Steingrimsson, Teledyne Marine Systems Director of Sales – Vehicles, said, “We will continue to work with DOF Subsea and other commercial survey users to optimize the Slocum glider for oil and gas applications and make the Slocum glider the ultra-long endurance autonomous underwater vehicle of choice for service providers

MTR 100: Teledyne Marine Systems Group

Insights from Thomas W. Altshuler, Ph.D., VP and Group GM, Teledyne Marine Systems   Please provide an overview of the companies in your group, citing examples of group collaboration.     The Teledyne Marine Systems Group consists of Teledyne Benthos, Teledyne Gavia, and Teledyne Webb Research. The group focuses on the development, production, and support of underwater vehicles and tow-bodies, acoustic communication and positioning, and sound sources and infrastructure to support subsea data collection. The three companies that make up the Marine Systems Group work in concert

The February 2024 edition of Marine Technology Reporter is focused on Oceanographic topics and technologies.
Read the Magazine Sponsored by

Authors & Contributors

Marine Technology Magazine Cover Mar 2024 -

Marine Technology Reporter is the world's largest audited subsea industry publication serving the offshore energy, subsea defense and scientific communities.

Subscribe
Marine Technology ENews subscription

Marine Technology ENews is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

Subscribe for MTR E-news