MCTECH RF Technologies

Defense & National Security Dual-Use Technology Priority Signal Founded 2014

Last updated: Jul 14, 2026

MCTECH RF Technologies is an Israeli developer and manufacturer of high-end radio-frequency jamming and counter-drone (C-UAS) systems, whose AI-enabled MC-HORIZON product family detects, classifies, and neutralizes hostile UAVs and RF-triggered threats for military, homeland-security, and critical-infrastructure customers worldwide.

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Company Overview

**Product and the concrete problem it solves.** MCTECH RF Technologies builds radio-frequency (RF) jamming and counter-unmanned-aerial-system (C-UAS) equipment for the specific, fast-growing problem of small drones used as weapons, smuggling vehicles, and intelligence-collection tools. The threat MCTECH addresses is now ubiquitous: cheap quadcopters and first-person-view (FPV) attack drones are used to drop munitions on maneuvering troops, to smuggle phones, weapons, and contraband into prisons, to surveil bases and VIP details, and to violate the airspace of airports, stadiums, and sensitive installations. MCTECH's answer is a family of RF-based systems, branded **MC-HORIZON**, that detect a drone's presence, classify it, and then jam the radio links the drone depends on — its command-and-control channel and its satellite-navigation (GNSS) reception — forcing it to abort, hover, land, or return to its operator. The company positions itself as a specialist that has, in its own framing, focused on "high-end" RF jammers and counter-drone defense since well before the current drone-warfare surge, giving it a decade of fielded product iteration rather than a single-generation offering.

**Core technology and how it actually works.** MCTECH's approach is electronic warfare in miniature: rather than shooting a drone down kinetically, its systems radiate directional or omnidirectional RF energy across the frequency bands drones use, severing the operator's control link and denying GNSS positioning so the target cannot navigate to its objective. The flagship **MC-HORIZON D360** line is built around 360-degree aerial awareness and layered detect-track-defeat operation. Recent V5-generation platforms come in complementary form factors: the **MC-HORIZON D360S** is a stationary variant that protects strategic buildings and sensitive installations with full-perimeter coverage, while the **MC-HORIZON D360BP** ("BP" for backpack/manpack) is a soldier-carried, reactive system that, per the company, detects, acquires, and neutralizes single targets or drone swarms within roughly a two-kilometer radius while a force is on the move. Crucially, MCTECH has layered artificial-intelligence and RF-sensing capabilities on top of the jamming hardware: the systems are marketed as using AI to detect, classify, and neutralize hostile drones as their communication protocols evolve. As the company's marketing lead put it, "in an environment where drone communication protocols constantly evolve, it is essential to integrate AI-based capabilities in order to keep pace with the rapid adaptation of adversaries" — an acknowledgment that static jammers age quickly and that software-defined, learning-based detection is the differentiator.

**Market, customers, and go-to-market.** MCTECH sells overwhelmingly into the government and security market — the company states that roughly 90% of its customers are governmental entities, including military land and air forces, counterterrorism units, homeland-security agencies, close-protection (VIP) details, and prison-security services. Its go-to-market is direct capital-equipment sales to state buyers, frequently supported by in-country partners and system integrators, and it has demonstrated an international footprint that is unusual for a company of its size. Documented deployments and engagements span multiple continents: MCTECH partnered with the South American firm BE1 to deliver AI-enabled MC-HORIZON D360S V5 and D360BPs V5 systems worth "millions" to an unnamed Latin American defense customer; it delivered manpack units to an African nation's military; it has supplied C-UAS jammers into sub-Saharan Africa; it delivered counter-IED and drone-defense systems to a presidential guard in East Asia; and it was tapped to protect a major international sporting event (the Maccabiah Games) from unauthorized drones. This blend of military, counter-terror, and event/critical-infrastructure security is precisely the buyer base a C-UAS specialist wants.

**Traction, funding, and third-party validation.** MCTECH's traction is evidenced through fielded contracts and independent trade-press coverage rather than through disclosed financials — the company is privately held and does not publish funding, revenue, or headcount, and no external venture round or acquisition is confirmable in the public record (a directory listing tagging it "Acquired" is unverified and should be treated with caution). What is verifiable is a consistent pattern of real deployments reported by credible defense outlets: Israel Defense, Unmanned Airspace, Shephard Media, JNS, and press-release channels have separately documented product launches (the MC-HORIZON D360BP manpack), export deals (Latin America via BE1; African militaries), and event security (Maccabiah). That multi-source, multi-year, multi-geography footprint is the strongest available third-party validation for a bootstrapped hardware manufacturer, even though headline dollar figures for individual contracts and any cumulative company scale remain undisclosed and should be independently verified.

**Founders and team background.** MCTECH was founded in 2014 and is based in Kfar Saba, Israel. Public sources credit its founding to **Chaim Meirovich** and **Ido Bar-Oz**; Bar-Oz is the company's public-facing commercial leader, described across sources variously as VP, Chief Marketing Officer, or CEO — a role ambiguity that reflects the limited public disclosure typical of a private defense manufacturer and should be confirmed directly. The team's evident strength is deep, hands-on RF and electronic-warfare engineering combined with a decade of iterating fielded jamming products against a live, evolving drone threat; Bar-Oz's public commentary (for example, on drone-smuggling incidents at European prisons in Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, as well as in Israel) reflects close operational awareness of customer use cases. The principal open questions are the depth of the broader engineering bench, current headcount, and the company's capacity to fund the continuous R&D that AI-driven C-UAS now demands — none of which are publicly documented.

**Competitive dynamics.** MCTECH competes in an increasingly crowded and well-capitalized C-UAS field, and its differentiation rests on being a focused, agile RF-jamming specialist rather than on scale. (1) Against Israeli defense primes and larger players — **Rafael** (Drone Dome), **Elbit Systems**, and **IAI/ELTA** — MCTECH trades system breadth and integration heft for lower cost, faster iteration, and portable form factors. (2) Against **D-Fend Solutions**, the Israeli C-UAS company acquired by Motorola Solutions, MCTECH's RF-jamming approach contrasts with D-Fend's radio-frequency cyber-takeover method (which lands a drone rather than jamming it) — a meaningful technical distinction in environments where collateral jamming of friendly signals is a concern. (3) Against international RF-C-UAS players such as **DroneShield** (Australia) and detection specialists like **Dedrone** and **Robin Radar**, MCTECH competes on price, portability, and its AI-classification layer. Its plausible edges are: (i) a decade-long, single-minded focus on RF jamming and counter-drone; (ii) a modular product line spanning fixed-site, vehicular, and man-portable form factors; (iii) AI-based, software-updatable detection/classification that keeps pace with new drone protocols; and (iv) a proven international export track record disproportionate to its size.

**Defense, security, and resilience dual-use relevance.** MCTECH's dual-use profile is genuine and unusually direct on the security axis, while its "commercial" side is best understood as civilian critical-infrastructure protection rather than a consumer market. The same MC-HORIZON hardware that protects maneuvering troops and forward bases also protects prisons from contraband-carrying drones, airports and energy sites from airspace intrusion, stadiums and mass-gathering events from surveillance or attack drones, and VIP details from targeted UAVs — a spectrum that runs from hard military use to homeland-security and public-safety resilience. This is the core of a credible dual-use thesis: RF counter-drone and counter-IED jamming is simultaneously a battlefield capability and a civil-protection capability, and demand for both has surged in parallel. The honest calibration is twofold. First, MCTECH is overwhelmingly a defense/security supplier (roughly 90% government), so the "dual" is military-plus-civil-security rather than a large independent commercial line. Second, RF jamming has an intrinsic technical ceiling: it is degraded or defeated by autonomous drones that fly pre-programmed routes without live RF links and, most pointedly, by the fiber-optic-guided FPV drones that Israel's own defense industry is now racing to counter — a threat that carries no jammable radio signal at all. MCTECH's AI-sensing investments partially address the detection-and-classification half of that problem, but the neutralization half remains RF-bound.

**Growth stage, trajectory, and key diligence risks.** MCTECH reads as a commercially **established but small and privately opaque** niche manufacturer: founded in 2014, shipping multiple product generations (now V5), and exporting fielded systems across South America, Africa, East Asia, and Israel. Its trajectory is favorable in the sense that the C-UAS market is expanding rapidly and MCTECH already has products in the field and a repeat pattern of international deals. The key diligence risks are, first, **competitive intensity** from far-better-capitalized defense primes and specialist rivals; second, **the technical/regulatory limits of RF jamming** — spectrum-use restrictions in many jurisdictions, plus autonomous and fiber-optic drones that bypass RF defeat entirely; third, **financial and organizational opacity** — no disclosed funding, revenue, headcount, or verified contract values, and even the CEO/CMO role is ambiguous in public sources; fourth, **export-control and geopolitical exposure** inherent to selling electronic-warfare equipment internationally; and fifth, **customer concentration and lumpy government procurement**, which make revenue visibility poor. Progression from here would be evidenced by disclosed larger programs, integration of non-RF (kinetic or optical) defeat layers to counter fiber-optic drones, named prime-contractor partnerships, and any transparency on scale.

Dual-Use Assessment

Military & Commercial Applications

MCTECH's dual-use profile is direct on the security axis and civil-protection-oriented on the 'commercial' side. (1) The same MC-HORIZON RF counter-drone hardware serves hard military use (protecting maneuvering troops, forward bases, and convoys, including counter-IED/RCIED jamming) and civilian critical-infrastructure and public-safety protection (prisons against contraband drones, airports and energy sites against airspace intrusion, stadiums and mass-gathering events, and VIP close-protection details). (2) Demand for both military and homeland-security counter-drone has surged in parallel since 2023, making the capability structurally dual-use. (3) The company's AI/RF-sensing layer — detecting and classifying drones as their protocols evolve — is equally applicable to defense and civil airspace security. Calibration: MCTECH is overwhelmingly a government/defense supplier (roughly 90% government customers), so the 'dual' is military-plus-civil-security rather than a large independent consumer/commercial business. Further calibration on capability limits: RF jamming is degraded by autonomous drones flying pre-programmed routes without live RF links and defeated entirely by fiber-optic-guided FPV drones that carry no jammable signal — a threat Israel's defense industry is actively racing to counter — so the neutralization half of MCTECH's offering remains RF-bound even as its detection/classification improves.

Strategic Fit Assessment

Research priority signal

Priority signal means this entry may be worth researching within the Claw & Talon thesis. It does not mean investable, suitable, endorsed, available, or likely to produce returns.

MCTECH is a focused, decade-old Israeli C-UAS/RF-jamming specialist whose appeal is a proven, exportable product line in a booming market, tempered by scale opacity and the structural limits of RF defeat. (1) Market tailwind: counter-drone demand has surged across military, homeland-security, and critical-infrastructure buyers since 2023, and MCTECH already has fielded products (MC-HORIZON D360 family, now V5) rather than a roadmap. (2) Real, multi-geography traction: documented deals and deployments span Latin America (via partner BE1), African militaries, sub-Saharan Africa, an East Asian presidential guard, and event security (Maccabiah Games) — a footprint disproportionate to the company's size. (3) Differentiation via focus and AI: a decade of single-minded RF-jamming iteration plus an AI/RF-sensing classification layer that is software-updatable against evolving drone protocols, offered in cost-effective, portable form factors that undercut defense primes. (4) Direct dual-use relevance spanning military combat use and civil-security/critical-infrastructure protection. Counterweights that should dominate assessment: (a) intense competition from far-better-capitalized primes (Rafael, Elbit, IAI/ELTA) and specialists (D-Fend/Motorola, DroneShield); (b) RF jamming's technical ceiling against autonomous and, critically, fiber-optic-guided FPV drones that carry no jammable signal; (c) near-total financial and organizational opacity (no disclosed funding, revenue, headcount; ambiguous CEO/CMO role); and (d) export-control and geopolitical exposure inherent to selling EW equipment. This is a priority-signal assessment of strategic and technical fit, not an investment recommendation.

Strategic Value to U.S.-Israel Alliance

MCTECH's strategic value sits in fielded, exportable counter-drone capability that is directly aligned with the most acute current threat in both defense and homeland security. (1) Capability relevance: RF counter-drone and counter-IED jamming addresses the single fastest-growing tactical threat — cheap weaponized and smuggling drones — across military, counter-terror, prison, airport, energy, and event-security use cases. (2) Sovereign and allied supply: an indigenous Israeli C-UAS manufacturer with man-portable and fixed-site systems contributes to domestic and allied protective capacity and to an export base that has reached multiple continents. (3) Adaptability: the AI/RF-sensing layer, marketed as keeping pace with evolving drone protocols through software updates, is the kind of adaptable capability that matters in a threat landscape that changes month to month. (4) Resilience framing: much of MCTECH's utility is civil-protection resilience — shielding prisons, critical infrastructure, and mass gatherings — not only battlefield use. The realized strategic weight is capped by scale opacity and by RF jamming's inability to defeat fiber-optic-guided or fully autonomous drones; MCTECH's long-run strategic value depends on whether it can add non-RF defeat layers and grow beyond a small-manufacturer footprint.

Key Technologies

  • High-power multi-band RF jamming across drone command-and-control and GNSS/satellite-navigation frequencies
  • AI-based RF sensing for drone detection, classification, and reactive neutralization that adapts to evolving drone communication protocols
  • MC-HORIZON D360 360-degree detect-track-defeat architecture spanning stationary (D360S) and man-portable (D360BP) form factors
  • Man-portable 'manpack' reactive C-UAS enabling on-the-move force protection with an approximately 2 km engagement radius
  • Counter-swarm operation capable of engaging single targets or multiple simultaneous drones
  • Counter-IED / RCIED RF jamming for convoy and route protection
  • Modular product line spanning fixed-site, vehicular, and wearable/portable jamming platforms

Use Cases & Applications

  • Force protection for maneuvering ground troops against FPV and attack drones
  • Fixed-site protection of strategic buildings, military bases, and sensitive installations
  • Counter-IED / RCIED jamming for convoys, routes, and EOD operations
  • Prison anti-smuggling defense against drones delivering phones, weapons, and contraband
  • Airport and critical-infrastructure (energy, ports) airspace protection
  • VIP and close-protection details against targeted surveillance or attack drones
  • Security of major public events and mass gatherings (e.g., international sporting events)
  • Border and counter-smuggling drone interdiction

Sources and verification

This profile is based on public-source research, Claw & Talon curation, and editorial judgment. Inclusion does not imply endorsement, partnership, investment, or a recommendation to transact. Readers should still confirm current status, customers, funding, and product claims before relying on this profile. The editorial policy explains how profiles are researched, where automated drafting is used, and how corrections work.

This record lists 8 public references used for company identity, status, positioning, or material-claim review.

Public sources

The links below are visible public references used for source discipline around company identity, status, funding, customer, acquisition, public-company, or other material claims where available.

Investor Lens

What this entry is

Private startup

Why it may matter

MCTECH RF Technologies may matter as a Defense & National Security entry with not currently an investable standalone company for Israeli technology research.

How an independent investor should read this

Not currently an investable standalone company. Read this profile as a starting point for independent verification, not as a recommendation or suitability assessment.

Evidence to verify

  • Verify current status
  • Verify traction
  • Verify cap table/funding
  • Verify technical claims
  • Verify regulatory/export-control issues
  • Verify customer concentration

Main investor questions

  • Is the company currently active, independently financeable, and raising or not raising on terms you can verify?
  • What customer, revenue, product, and technical evidence supports the company story?
  • What valuation, cap table, rights, and follow-on assumptions would govern any private exposure?
  • Does the dual-use claim map to actual commercial and government/defense/resilience buyer evidence?
  • What evidence would change the thesis or show that the profile is stale?

What not to infer

  • Inclusion does not imply endorsement.
  • Inclusion does not imply allocation availability or current fundraising.
  • Scores do not indicate investment suitability or expected returns.
  • Strategic importance does not automatically imply venture return potential.

Diligence questions

  • What evidence verifies MCTECH RF Technologies's current customer traction, deployment status, and revenue concentration?
  • Which technical claims are independently demonstrable today, and which remain roadmap or pilot-stage assertions?
  • Where does the product create real defense, intelligence, critical-infrastructure, or emergency-response value beyond ordinary commercial adoption?
  • What export-control, supply-chain, manufacturing, or classified-market constraints could affect U.S. and allied adoption?
  • What would disconfirm the priority signal: weak customer references, thin technical differentiation, poor capital efficiency, or limited allied-market access?

Related sector

See the Defense & National Security sector page for market context, related subcategories, and other Israeli companies in this part of the database.

Need a diligence readout?

Use the profile and related checklists as a starting point. If the decision needs more context, request a company screen, founder-call prep, diligence memo, or sector readout.