Read Today's Knowledge Driven News

About KDR

HOME

Articles by KDR

V for Vendetta - R for Reality

Canadian Bird Flu Pandemic Looming ?

Shill of the Week: Stephan Harper

Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer

Chicken Little Terrorist of the Week: Creating Fake Terrorists

Shill of the Week: Paul Martin

The Number 1 Reason YOU became a Slave


Extras

HIV=AIDS - Fact of Fraud
The Real Face Of The European Union
Loose Change 2
The Masters of the Universe
Bill Hicks on the Elite
Sweet Misery

Military Blimps Report for Duty

Renae Merle - Washington Post
August 09, 2006

Technology In the era of $300 million fighter jets, satellite-guided rockets and complicated battlefield computer networks, Multimax Inc. is trying to revive an old-fashioned technology to thrust the information technology firm onto the front line. The Largo company has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on this new project, the design looks like an elliptical UFO, but the result will be familiar: It's a blimp.

"It is somewhat uncharted waters" for the firm, said Ron Oholendt, a retired Air Force colonel and the program manager. The company has enlisted help from NASA and scientists at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, which is analyzing the design, and last year began hunting for support from the Pentagon, Department of Homeland Security or the Director of National Intelligence. With $14 million, the company could finish building and test a prototype for its airship, which they call the Maxflyer, Oholendt said. The company plans to submit a proposal for the system with the Homeland Security Department on Friday, he said.

Multimax is one of several defense companies pouncing on the military's renewed interest in using high-flying, unmanned, helium-filled balloons -- sometimes tied to the ground with a long rope -- as possible weapons. Lockheed Martin Corp. is developing a blimp that it says will reach an altitude of 65,000 feet, while Raytheon Co. is developing one designed to reach 10,000 feet and be tethered to the ground. Blackwater USA, better known as one of the largest security contractors in Iraq, expects to finish its prototype, which aims to reach an altitude of 5,000 feet to 15,000 feet, in December.

The military's interest is driven by a search for cheap alternatives to satellites and unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones. Some low-flying versions are already in Iraq, Afghanistan and along the U.S.-Mexico border. The blimps are known as airships or aerostats, a type that is tethered to the ground, and can stay up longer than the unmanned aerial vehicles popularized by the Iraq war and are cheaper than military satellites that can take years to launch, supporters of the technology say.

"They can stay aloft very efficiently for long periods of times," said Col. Jeff Souder, product manager for an Army program. An airship is "somewhere around five to seven times less expensive than a manned aircraft per hour, and it would be greatly less expensive than satellites."

The market is still small, but analysts say it could develop into a multibillion-dollar industry if the technology can survive the pitfalls that led to its initial demise, including being shot down by enemy gunfire or falling prey to damage by bad weather. "They make a heck of a big target in the sky, but it's possible they could have communications, missile-detection and other applications," said Michel Merluzeau, director of military airborne systems at Frost & Sullivan Inc., a research firm. "They still make a very big blip on a radar screen, so you can't put them too close to the enemy."

Read the full article here

Broken Link? If the link to the original article is broken or has been altered you can view the article by clicking the "Expand/Collapse" button below.


Maple Leaf Footer
About KDR | | Home | | Weekly Features Archive

Extras

Quote: US Military
Shill: Dalton McGuinty
Chicken Little Terrorist: Cyanide Attack on NY Subway

Dumbass: Fat Doctors

Weekly Features Archive

In Depth

What Is Wrong With Canada? What Is Wrong With Canada?


Recent 9-11 News Suppressed by the Media Recent 9-11 News Suppressed by the Media


Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer


Number 1 Reason YOU Are a Slave The Number 1 Reason YOU became a Slave


Liberal Party Logo Conservative Party Logo New Democrat Party Logo Knowledge Driven Look at Your Favourite Canadian Political Parties

Archive

June
July

August 2006

30 31 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 01 02

Weekly Features
2006
2005


Read Today's Knowledge Driven News

About KDR

KnowledgeDrivenRevolution.com

Counter

Copyright © 2005-6 KnowledgeDrivenRevolution.com