Team ABL Begins Making Airborne
Laser Turret Source: Defence Data Ltd. April 10, 2000
Team Airborne Laser (ABL), has begun making the
high-energy laser weapon system's turret assembly at Lockheed Martin's
Sunnyvale facility in California. The turret assembly, fitted to the
nose of the system's modified 747-400 Freighter aircraft, houses a
rotating 1.5-meter telescope designed to locate hostile missiles while
in their boost phase.
The turret assembly is one part of Lockheed Martin's
overall Beam Control/Fire Control (BC/FC) system that ensures the
laser is accurately aligned and pointed at its target. The turret
assembly is housed in a "roll shell" that allows it to rotate 150
degrees in order to track the moving missile. The complete Roll Shell
is to be delivered to Boeing for integration into the modified 747 in
the spring of 2001.
Work was recently completed on the first half of the
system's Roll Shell. Production on the second half of the Roll Shell
is under way with an overall completion date set for this summer.
[INLINE] The Roll Shell consists of 36 layers of
graphite-epoxy cloth laminate, with an outer layer of Astrostrike
copper mesh for lightning and static build-up protection. Each layer
is applied to the roll shell mandrel to form the final part. The first
half took 29 days to complete, and one day to cure in a
high-temperature autoclave. The Roll Shell half will undergo
ultrasonic inspection and will be trimmed to its final dimensions. It
then will be integrated to internal components and then integrated
into the final turret assembly. Final assembly of the two Roll Shell
halves is slated for this summer.
"The biggest challenge the team faced was applying the
large sheets of graphite epoxy cloth laminate over the small corners
of the Roll Shell mandrel," said Steve Pieracci, Lockheed Martin ABL
engineer. "The engineering and manufacturing team worked this (out)...
by perfecting six design patterns, which were then repeated until the
final ply."
ABL is a megawatt-class laser weapon system carried on a
747-400 Freighter aircraft designed to autonomously detect, track and
destroy hostile theatre ballistic missiles. ABL will operate at
altitudes above 40,000 feet where it will acquire and track missiles
as they are launched using an infrared search and track system. The
BC/FC system will then accurately point and fire the laser with
sufficient energy to destroy the missile while it is still in the
highly vulnerable boost phase of flight - before separation of its
warheads.
Team ABL includes the U.S. Air Force, Boeing, TRW and
Lockheed Martin. Boeing is the team lead for weapon system
integration, and supplies the 747-400 Freighter aircraft and the
battle management, command, control, communications and computers. TRW
provides the chemical-oxygen-iodine laser and ground support. Lockheed
Martin Space Systems is designing, developing, and building the BC/FC
system.
The first 747-400 Airborne Laser flying platform was
recently delivered to the Boeing modification centre in Wichita, Kan.,
where it will be transformed over the next 18 months into America's
first directed energy weapon system. A series of demonstrations lead
to a test in 2003 against a boosting theatre ballistic missile.
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