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Subject: Boeing Laser Avenger Shoots Down Unmanned Aerial Vehicle in Tests
doggtag    1/27/2009 8:07:14 AM
(Source: Boeing Co.; issued January 26, 2009) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. --- The Boeing Company has successfully demonstrated that a laser system mounted on an Avenger combat vehicle can shoot down a small unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) like those that increasingly threaten U.S. troops deployed in war zones. During tests last month at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., Laser Avenger achieved its principal test objectives by using its advanced targeting system to acquire and track three small UAVs flying against a complex background of mountains and desert. The laser system also shot down one of the UAVs from an operationally relevant range. These tests mark the first time a combat vehicle has used a laser to shoot down a UAV. Representatives of the U.S. Army's Cruise Missile Defense Systems project office observed the tests. "Small UAVs armed with explosives or equipped with surveillance sensors are a growing threat on the battlefield," said Gary Fitzmire, vice president and program director of Boeing Directed Energy Systems. "Laser Avenger, unlike a conventional weapon, can fire its laser beam without creating missile exhaust or gun flashes that would reveal its position. As a result, Laser Avenger can neutralize these UAV threats while keeping our troops safe." The tests follow a 2007 demonstration in which an earlier version of Laser Avenger neutralized improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and unexploded ordnance (UXO) on the ground. "We doubled the laser power; added sophisticated acquisition, tracking and pointing capability; and simplified and ruggedized the design," said Lee Gutheinz, Boeing program director for High-Energy Laser/Electro-Optical Systems. "Boeing developed and integrated these upgrades in less than a year, underscoring our ability to rapidly respond to warfighters' needs." Laser Avenger integrates a directed energy weapon together with the kinetic weapons on the proven Avenger air defense system developed by Boeing Combat Systems in Huntsville, Ala. It is a Boeing-funded initiative to demonstrate that directed energy weapons are maturing and are relevant to today's battlefield. Boeing leads the way in developing laser systems for a variety of U.S. Air Force and Army warfighter applications. These systems include the Airborne Laser, the Advanced Tactical Laser, the High Energy Laser Technology Demonstrator and the Tactical Relay Mirror System. A unit of The Boeing Company, Boeing Integrated Defense Systems is one of the world's largest space and defense businesses specializing in innovative and capabilities-driven customer solutions, and the world's largest and most versatile manufacturer of military aircraft. Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Integrated Defense Systems is a $32.1 billion business with 71,000 employees worldwide. -ends-
 
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doggtag    with a cool pic, courtesty Defense-Aerospace.Com   1/27/2009 8:13:32 AM
http://www.defense-aerospace.com/base/util/101687_1.jpg" width="500" border="0" />
 
(Article available via Defense-Aerospace.Com
,January 27, 2009 Press Releases.)
 
 
....if it'll "cook" IEDs, UXOs, and UAVs, would soft fleshy people be all that much more difficult?
Obviously, thin-skinned vehicles (cars, technicals) would be just as vulnerable as the UAVs and explosive devices.
Curious of its maximum range potential: this also has the makings of a zero-bullet-drop, crosswind-insensitive sniping anti-sniper system.
 
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WarNerd       1/27/2009 4:11:09 PM

....if it'll "cook" IEDs, UXOs, and UAVs, would soft fleshy people be all that much more difficult?

Obviously, thin-skinned vehicles (cars, technicals) would be just as vulnerable as the UAVs and explosive devices.

Curious of its maximum range potential: this also has the makings of a zero-bullet-drop, crosswind-insensitive sniping anti-sniper system.
 
Take the quotation marks off the "cook" for a better description of this weapon's effects.  In classic science fiction this is what was called a "heat ray".
 
Continuous beam lasers are primarily an incendiary weapon and will be subject to many of the same legal restrictions as napalm and white phosphorus.  The eyes are particularly vulnerable, and any hit on a persons face will probably result in retinal scaring and/or permanent blindness, another legal no-no that can be used to classifies it in an anti-personnel role as a "terror weapon" that is designed to main rather than kill.  Attacks on manned targets, except in a strictly anti-material sniping role, are therefore ruled out.  The anti-sniper system is considered especially heinous because it will typically be striking the face and the sniper's telescopic sight will concentrate the beam guaranteeing blindness is at least one eye.
 
Beyond that, this weapon typically takes several seconds of exposure to have effect.  Attacks on ground targets are also limited by dust, smoke, and distortion due to heat and moisture rising from the ground.  IED's and UXO are immobile and can be attacked from relatively short ranges (<100 yards) over sustained period, to minimize this effect.  The current generation of UAV's and indirect fire artillery shells, rockets, and missiles lack the ability to detect and evade attacks, follow simple, easy to predict, trajectories, and being higher up are in clearer air and more vulnerable. 
 
People under attack from this weapon will reflexively evade (it will feel like being touched with a hot branding iron, and have many of the same effects) resulting in fewer deaths and but many with horrific scaring.
 
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DarthAmerica       2/9/2009 6:28:33 PM
People under attack from this weapon will reflexively evade (it will feel like being touched with a hot branding iron, and have many of the same effects) resulting in fewer deaths and but many with horrific scaring.


Depends on the power too. Crank up the juice enough and the effect could also be rather immediately violent. I'd much rather be shot!


-DA 
 
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lurker       2/12/2009 2:13:48 AM
would obviously be able to go through a man like knife through butter.
 
 
Did I just see up there that the US is facing an increasing threat from small unmanned UAV vehicles on the battlefields of TODAY?!  Where are the insurgents and terrorists getting this techhttp://www.strategypage.com/CuteSoft_Client/CuteEditor/Images/emsmileo.gif" align="absMiddle" border="0" alt="" />!
 
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DarthAmerica       2/12/2009 2:20:26 AM

would obviously be able to go through a man like knife through butter.

 

 

Did I just see up there that the US is facing an increasing threat from small unmanned UAV vehicles on the battlefields of TODAY?!  Where are the insurgents and terrorists getting this techhttp://www.strategypage.com/Images/emsmileo.gif" align="absMiddle" border="0" alt="" />!




You can get it from a hobbyshop or even the internet if you are even a little tech savy.
 

h*tp://www.rotomotion.com/?gclid=CM7V-Lm41pgCFRwDagod-3wrcw 

They aren't very complicated machines really.

-DA 

 
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