Sunday, March 4, 2018

U.S. Navy Awards Contract To Develop Lasers That Can Take Out Drones And Small Boats

Artist’s rendering of the Navy's HELIOS shipboard laser weapon. (Image courtesy of Lockheed Martin)

Military.com: Navy Buys Lasers to 'Dazzle' Drones, Take Out Small Boats

The Navy has awarded an initial $150 million contract to Lockheed Martin to develop shipboard lasers that can "dazzle" enemy drone swarms and take out small boats.

It's a "watershed moment" in the Navy's decades-long effort to develop laser weapons for surface ships, Ian McKennie, Lockheed's business development leader for laser systems, said Friday of the $150 million contract that could go to $942.8 million with options.

Lockheed plans to deliver two of the systems to the Navy in fiscal 2020. One would go on board an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer for testing and the second would be used for land testing at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

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WNU Editor: This is just the start. I would not be surprised if in a few years every major U.S. navy ship will have such a laser system.

More News On The U.S. Navy Awarding A Contract To Develop Lasers That Can Take Out Drones And Small Boats

U.S. Navy Awards $150M Contract to Develop Lasers -- US News and World Report
A $150 million Lockheed contract will allow destroyers to use Star Wars technology against smaller targets. -- Bloomberg
First Combat Laser For Navy Warship: Lockheed HELIOS -- Breaking Defense
Navy destroyers will get these new anti-drone lasers -- We Are The Mighty
High-Energy Laser Weapons Are Moving Out to Sea -- Signal Magazine
This Lockheed Martin contract could mean laser weapons are almost ready for prime time -- Washington Business Journal
US Warship To Carry Deadly Laser In Less Than 24 Months -- Sputnik International

2 comments:

jimbrown said...

Or big ships or big planes or short dictators.

Anonymous said...

General Atomics demonstrated a 150KW solid state laser a couple years ago that was surprisingly small. They also said it could be scaled to 300KW within that design. So I think the USA is further along in power output than this Navy announcement leads on. On board power supply is probably a tougher constraint to overcome than laser output.