BENGALURU — May 11, 2026 : Tonbo Imaging has introduced the AVG50, a high-altitude autonomous surveillance system designed for persistent long-range monitoring in rugged and elevated operational environments. Developed as part of the company’s Avenger series of electro-optical and infrared payloads, the system is intended to support military and homeland security requirements involving continuous border and remote-area surveillance.
The AVG50 integrates high-definition thermal imaging, daylight optics, and Short-Wave Infrared (SWIR) sensors within a multi-sensor payload architecture. The system is supported by artificial intelligence-enabled processing for automated target recognition and continuous video target tracking. According to the company, the surveillance device provides a functional detection and identification range exceeding 40 kilometers.
Unlike conventional pan-tilt surveillance structures, the AVG50 utilizes an aerodynamic external profile combined with a multi-axis inertial stabilization system optimized for high-altitude conditions. The design is intended to reduce the effects of wind resistance, turbulence, and mechanical vibration while maintaining stable long-range imagery and target tracking performance.
The electro-optical and infrared sensor suite enables the system to detect and monitor targets that are difficult to identify through conventional radar systems, including platforms employing radar-stealth characteristics. The integration of thermal, daylight, and SWIR imaging allows the device to maintain operational effectiveness during day and night operations and under challenging weather conditions.
The AVG50 is engineered for unattended deployment in isolated and hard-to-access locations. It is powered by an integrated fuel-cell energy system capable of supporting months of continuous operation without frequent maintenance or battery replacement. The system also incorporates secure long-range communications modules for transmitting real-time imagery, surveillance data, and tracking information to remote command centers.
The surveillance platform forms part of Tonbo Imaging’s broader portfolio of electro-optical systems developed for reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition across land, naval, and aerial domains. Related systems within the Avenger family, including the Avenger-S50, are four-axis stabilized payloads deployed on aerial platforms such as drones, combat helicopters, maritime patrol aircraft, aerostats, and ground-based surveillance systems. These payloads typically integrate cooled HD MWIR thermal imagers, low-light CMOS HD color cameras, SWIR sensors, laser range finders, infrared illuminators, and laser pointers.
Internationally, the AVG50 enters a market segment currently occupied by a limited number of defense manufacturers specializing in ultra-long-range electro-optical surveillance systems. Comparable systems include the SPEED-ER platform developed by Controp Precision Technologies in Israel, as well as long-range surveillance systems produced by Elbit Systems, Teledyne FLIR, and Safran Electronics & Defense. These platforms similarly combine thermal, SWIR, and daylight imaging technologies for long-range border monitoring and target acquisition applications.
Tonbo Imaging stated that the AVG50 is intended to support persistent surveillance operations in contested, mountainous, and remote environments where long-endurance autonomous monitoring is required. The company did not release details regarding deployment status, operational users, platform integration, or procurement contracts associated with the system.
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