Say what you will about
Boeing (NYSE: BA). Call its 747-8 freighter
program
a disappointment. Sigh over its serial failures
to bring KC-Xin for a landing. Deride the 787
"Dreamliner" as a
slow-motion nightmare. Despite all the company's
failings, one thing you cannot deny:
Boeing never gives up. It keeps on
swinging for the fences.
Case in point: We all know how a
penny-pinching Pentagonhas been closing its wallet to
hi-tech military ventures lately. Back in April, Secretary of
Defense Gates threw Boeing and its partners --
Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC),
Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT), and
Raytheon (NYSE: RTN) -- a bone when he OKed
funding to proceed on the
Airborne Laser prototype. Yet Gates
nixed the idea of a second plane, saying the funds were
needed elsewhere.
You might have thought this would chill Boeing's
enthusiasm for the idea of loading
hi-tech raygunson airplanes. Not so. To the contrary,
Boeing charged ahead with another idea it's been working on
-- the Advanced Tactical Laser ("ATL" -- not to be confused
with ABL.) And guess what?
This one's working just dandy.
Ready, aim, fire!
Over the past several months, Boeing investors have
been treated to a series of increasingly bullish press
releases (and some pretty cool video clips) describing the
ATL's progress. The laser has moved from test firings ... to
target practice on a stalled automobile ... to the successful
air-to-ground damage of a moving target. Boeing is using its
laser to slice and dice targets with the precision of a Jedi
Knight.
According to a press release issued just yesterday, Boeing
successfully fired ATL from an in-flight Boeing C-130 last
month. It targeted, engaged, and burned a sizeable hole in
the chassis of remotely operated automobile driving around at
30 mph. (No crash test dummies were injured in the making of
this movie.)
If you've
seen the
laser in action, it's hard not to be impressed. Unlike
what you've seen in the movies -- Han Solo blasting
stormtroopers with rays of blue light -- the ATL seems to
work by magic. You don't
seea thing happening; you notice the faint buzz of a
far-off airplane, when suddenly your car bursts into flame,
and in a matter of microseconds the metal just melts away,
leaving a scorched hole as the only evidence that something
happened. Scary.
Mission: Possible
Scary -- and exciting. ATL's results mark a big win for
Boeing and partner
L-3 Communications (NYSE: LLL). This
proof-of-concept could be the key to securing future funding
for the project and others like it. It's one small step
toward rendering gunpowder a 20th Century technology -- and
one gigantic leap for Boeing.
This article was originally published as
Boeing Is a Jedi Masteron
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