Anti-aircraft laser unveiled at Farnborough Airshow

I'm anxiously waiting my AVWEEK covering the Farnborough show.

It would get a good work out if it got deployed to Israel.
 
Colour me unimpressed, yet ;)

From the article: Peter Felstead, editor of Jane's Defence Weekly, told BBC News:

"OK, so a UAV isn't armoured, nor is it flying fast,... "

...not to mention it wasn't evading. Oops, I mentioned it ;)

" ...but as you can see from the video they shot it down in flames," he said.

Yes, after a dwell time of 7 or 8 seconds on that slow, soft, non-evading target. And no way to tell from the video how long it took to get a target lock since it starts pretty much with the actual lock. And a whole host of other hurdles yet to clear. Got a long way to go yet before it would seem to be combat field ready. Seems a bit premature to be celebrating.
 
Follow one of the links to earlier articles, e.g. Record power for military laser, 22 February 2007:
A laser developed for military use is a few steps away from hitting a power threshold thought necessary to turn it into a battlefield weapon.

The Solid State Heat Capacity Laser (SSHCL) has achieved 67 kilowatts (kW) of average power in the laboratory.

It could take only a further six to eight months to break the "magic" 100kW mark required for the battlefield, the project's chief scientist told the BBC.

The one demonstrated at Farnborough, according to the article of 19th July 2010, produces a 50kW beam. So much for a 100kW laser in six to eight months...

It also helps if the target is painted a nice absorbent black, as that UAV seemed to be. On the other hand, if the target is brightly reflective, it's easier for other weapons to spot.
 
Raytheon's laser bods have a history of doing stuff like this. A previous test with the Laser Area Defense System (which is probably the same one AdrianH is referring to) had the system 'successfully engage mortar rounds' - that were sitting on the deck rather than flying through the air.

Equally, THEL (tactical high energy laser) claims to have shot down mortar salvoes in flight about six years ago with neither hide nor hair seen of the project since.

You'll notice that the boeing Airborne Laser has largely dropped from public view, as well - there was a declared successful 'hit' on a ballistic missile target August 10 last year, but that was with a 'low-power beam' rather than the full monty. The first high-energy attack on a missile was supposed to be late 2009, but I've not seen anything about it.

The only declared 'attack' test was on a stationary vehicle
http://boeing.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=817
But there's no detail on what 'laser beam's energy defeated the vehicle' means in real terms, or, again, over what time-scale the laser strike was delivered.


In short, right at the moment I'm perfectly happy with rapidly moving chunks of metal, thank you very much.
 
locarno24 said:
In short, right at the moment I'm perfectly happy with rapidly moving chunks of metal, thank you very much.
Over here there is not much interest in laser weapons left. In ground com-
bat they are too vulnerable to rain, dust, fog or smoke, natural or artifici-
al, and as anti-air weapons they have still to demonstrate that they can
achieve anything a much less expensive missile can not do, and they also
need more infrastructure and their power requirements make them more
difficult to hide.
 
IMO lasers won't have a practical lethal application beyond targetting until we start putting weapons in space to shoot at other things in space. Atmosphere does not play nice.
 
Remember this is the unclassified info that they're willing to release. This could be the best they're capable of, they could also be sandbagging.

The U. S. Government denied the existance of stealth planes for years after they had been in use. They still won't comment on the existance of Delta teams (They do exist.). The government denied that the NSA existed for decades.

On the other hand they claimed significant progress in the so-called Star Wars ABM program, when they had made none.

Everything needs to be taken with a grain of salt.
 
justacaveman said:
On the other hand they claimed significant progress in the so-called Star Wars ABM program, when they had made none.

Yes, the Star Wars inflated claims were highly intentional. For good reason...
 
DFW said:
Yes, the Star Wars inflated claims were highly intentional ...
... and more than slightly dumb, since few people did believe it. To play
with obviously exaggerated or false claims is a sure way to be conside-
red an untrustworthy source in a very short time, and to get rid of that
reputation is extremely difficult.
 
DFW said:
It only mattered that the people who were intended to believe it did.
Who could that have been - the Chinese and the Soviets can not have
been the target, they did not believe it for a second, because they had
excellent intelligence sources deep within the US military system.

The only target I can think of were the US taxpayers who were made
to believe that it was a great idea to spend a couple more billions in or-
der to make a few companies happy.

Ah, well, but this is politics, so obviously off topic - sorry. :roll:
 
justacaveman said:
The U. S. Government denied the existance of stealth planes for years after they had been in use. They still won't comment on the existance of Delta teams (They do exist.). The government denied that the NSA existed for decades.

Then there's the NRO, where even the name was classified. Lots of government denial out there.
 
Somebody said:
AndrewW said:
justacaveman said:
The U. S. Government denied the existance of stealth planes for years after they had been in use. They still won't comment on the existance of Delta teams (They do exist.). The government denied that the NSA existed for decades.

Then there's the NRO, where even the name was classified. Lots of government denial out there.

Not to mention the United Network Command for Law and Enforcement, the United Nations Anti-Crime Organization and one should never forget the National Underwater and Marine Agency

Supreme Headquarters, Alien Defense Organization.

Military Alien Response Squadron

And the infamous part III of the Official Secrets Act (UK) which is illegal to reveal to one who has not signed it.........
 
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