Sea Fairing Robotics builds autonomous surface vehicles and shore-side systems designed for real ocean operation—limited power, limited bandwidth, and constantly changing seas.
Rather than relying on bespoke or fragile systems, the Sea Fairing glider is assembled from widely available, marine-proven components. This design philosophy prioritizes mechanical robustness, serviceability, and cost efficiency while preserving the performance needed for autonomous ocean missions. The result is a platform that is practical to deploy, straightforward to maintain, and capable of operating for extended periods without specialized support infrastructure.
The Shore console is the operational interface for Sea Fairing gliders. It unifies telemetry, AIS situational awareness, and command execution in a system designed to keep working when links degrade or disappear.
Public presentation ends here. Operational control remains behind authenticated access.
The Sea Fairing glider is a compact platform designed to remain deployed. It prioritizes passive stability, efficient propulsion, and software-defined autonomy.
Hull and deck geometry are optimized for predictable hydrodynamics and passive stability. Software-defined behavior reduces mechanical complexity and failure modes.
A compact ducted thruster supports efficient low-speed operation, precise heading control, and reduced entanglement risk—essential for long-duration deployments.
Autonomy is deterministic, observable, and replayable. Operators can review past decisions, examine AIS interactions, and understand how the glider responded to its environment.
Sea Fairing assumes bandwidth and latency will vary. The system supports low-data-rate telemetry, burst uploads, and store-and-forward logging so mission continuity survives link loss.
Future work includes low/ultra-low bandwidth endurance variants, higher-throughput sensing models, and cooperative multi-glider missions with shared situational awareness and shore-side orchestration.