real PR

Roy T. Fielding (fielding@kiwi.ics.uci.edu)
Fri, 23 Apr 1999 15:35:59 -0700


Tired of all those weak-puke Internet company press reports about
their plans to create a website? I am. This is why I invest in
a real company, so that I can feel that my money is actually going
to blow something up in a cool way (and make a profit too).

"With a slightly different set of sensors and fire control, the ATL
[Airborne Tactical Laser] also offers a unique ultra-precise strike
capability for operations other than war, where pinpoint accuracy,
tactical standoff and no collateral damage are dominant considerations."

Gee, I wonder why they mentioned that?

....Roy

Boeing Completes Testing of Tactical High Energy Laser

PR Newswire - April 21, 1999 13:41

CANOGA PARK, Calif., April 21 /PRNewswire/ -- The Boeing Company
(NYSE: BA) has successfully completed proof-of-concept testing of a new
high-energy chemical laser designed specifically for tactical weapons
applications. The new device is derived from the chemical-oxygen iodine laser
(COIL) technology originally developed by the Air Force Research Laboratory
and now in development for the U.S. Air Force Airborne Laser Program by
TRW. In contrast to current COIL technology, the new Tactical COIL is
optimized for power levels of 100 - 500 kW, operates at ground level, and
emits no exhaust.

"Tactical COIL technology permits, for the first time, highly mobile,
self-contained laser weapons with significant lethality at engagement ranges
up to 10 km for ground-to-air defensive systems, and over 20 km for
air-to-ground or air-to-air systems," said Mike Skolnick, vice president of the
Laser & Electro Optical Systems unit of Boeing. "Packaging concept studies
show complete weapons systems in roll-on, roll-off installations for rotorcraft
(V-22, CH-47), aircraft (AC-130), and ground vehicles."

Application studies have concentrated on the Airborne Tactical Laser (ATL)
system being developed by Boeing, which puts a 300 kW laser into a V-22
Osprey platform with an onboard optical sensor suite. Operating below cloud
ceiling, ATL's can provide a fast-response defensive screen against low
altitude anti-ship or overland cruise missiles in high-threat environments. A
ground-based Tactical COIL sized to counter short range tactical rockets could
be fully contained in one or two vehicles. With a slightly different set of
sensors and fire control, the ATL also offers a unique ultra-precise strike
capability for operations other than war, where pinpoint accuracy, tactical
standoff and no collateral damage are dominant considerations.

Recently, a Boeing proof-of-concept demonstration laser operated routinely at
approximately 20 kW during the test series. With exceptional reliability and
demonstrated repeatability, these tests explored performance over a wide
range of operating conditions. For several of the tests, the laser exhaust gases
were completely captured in a small sealed exhaust system. Data confirmed the
overall laser efficiency and the sealed exhaust system's ability to meet the
requirements for a scaled-up tactical COIL weapon system.

"This innovative COIL technology is capable of tactical mobile operations and
fills a gap between the existing very-large chemical lasers planned for the
Airborne Laser and the Space-Based Laser and the electrically powered solid
state lasers which could be available in the future," Skolnick said. "A portable
tactical COIL device of 100 to 300 kW, packaged into a standard shipping
container or carried aboard a rotorcraft, could be built in about 2 years."

SOURCE The Boeing Company

/CONTACT: Dan Beck, 818-586-4572, or Erik Simonsen, 562-797-5473, both
of The Boeing Company/

/Web site: http://www.boeing.com/