The biggest military modification
program ever at Boeing facilities in Wichita, Kan., has passed its halfway
mark and progress continues on schedule.
Team ABL --
Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and the U.S. Air Force -- is
building a revolutionary weapon system that will shoot down Scud-type ballistic
missiles from a modified 747-400 Freighter aircraft. The Airborne Laser
(ABL) will be able to locate and track missiles in the boost phase of their
flight, then accurately point and fire the laser with such energy that
the missiles will be destroyed near their launch areas.
The plane will become the first ABL flying platform upon completion
of the two-year modification effort in 2002 in Wichita. It then will undergo
a complete systems functional check and flight-test schedule to verify
aerodynamic stability and control.
The most visible modification will be the installation of a turret in
the aircraft nose from which a laser beam will emanate to destroy missiles
hundreds of miles away.
Brad Gorsuch, ABL program manager, Wichita Maintenance and Modification
Center, said engineering on the project is now 75-percent complete after
two years of work. Modification of the aircraft in Wichita began in January.
"You can see the nose modification where we will install the turret
in about a year and a half. It is being made by Lockheed Martin and will
weigh about 14,000 pounds."
On the main deck of the airplane in the "46 section," work continues
on replacing and beefing up the floor beams. In the lower lobe area below
where the laser modules will sit, the frames are being replaced where the
titanium belly skins will attach. The belly skins -- 25 feet long and 12
feet wide -- are a major part of the plane.
Other work currently being accomplished includes wiring and work on
building a pressure wall to protect the flight crew from the laser modules
and chemical storage.
Gorsuch said the ABL program is complicated and technical hurdles are
on the horizon, but he is confident they will be solved. "For the magnitude
of the modification involved, we are doing an outstanding job. We have
some schedule issues because of the magnitude of the work, but we'll work
through those and we're going to deliver this airplane on time in January
2002."
After tests in Wichita, the aircraft will be flown to Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif., for final systems integration and test. Then, the project
will culminate with a missile shoot-down in 2003. The Air Force envisions
a fleet of seven ABL aircraft, rapidly deployable anywhere around the world.
Team ABL is a model government - industry team effort that has resulted
in an on-cost, on-schedule, tightly focused program. Because of this revolutionary
approach, the Airborne Laser program has successfully hurdled technical
challenges and has instituted risk-reduction efforts to keep it on track.
The Air Force Airborne Laser System Program Office at Kirtland Air Force
Base, N.M., manages the ABL program; Col. Ellen Pawlikowski is executive
director of the effort.
CONTACT:
Bob Smith - Boeing (253) 773-0983
Ken Englade, U.S. Air Force (505) 846-7681