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Originally posted by C0bzz
reply to post by kilcoo316
IF the ship carries two lasers, what happens if you fire 10 hypersonic sea-skimming missiles at it?
Originally posted by kilcoo316
Originally posted by C0bzz
Fire one more missile than the amount of lasers on the ship.
The non-reliance on any finite supply of munitions is one of the key strengths of the system.
I suppose the only reliance is on power... but its not likely the ship will run out of fuel, is it?
Originally posted by RichardPrice
Whats the recharge time like for these puppies?
Originally posted by RichardPrice
In answer to the original question - no, this will not make anti-ship missiles obsolete.
Originally posted by RichardPrice
What it will do is create a new arms race - up until now, you haven't seen hardened missiles, missiles with active defences, missiles built to have zero RCS from the front.
It will happen, one side will field a missile which has 30cm of high temperature ablative material on the front, or simply the entire missile will be resistant to heat.
Or it will sense the laser and dodge it before it becomes an issue.
Or the missile gets to 50KM out, goes ballistic and then goes 'dumb', requiring no guidance or anything. 2 tonnes of uranium at Mach 10 will put a pretty serious dent in anything.
Once upon a time, someone asked the same question about aircraft and surface-to-air guided missiles. Look what happened...
Originally posted by kilcoo316
An Arleigh Burke generates up to ~30 MW of power at the turbine shafts.
Originally posted by kilcoo316
I would disagree, I believe it will accelerate the introduction of the rail gun.
Originally posted by kilcoo316
Some potential routes of development there... all with varying issues of some sort.
Originally posted by kilcoo316
When it becomes a question of power, the defending ship at 8,000 tons will always be able to beat the missile at 1 ton.
Originally posted by RichardPrice
The 4 General Electric LM2500-30's on an Arleigh Burke class destroyer produces a *peak* of 7.5MW on the shaft.
That does not mean constant output, and it does not mean usable power generation.
And the Arleigh Burke has that power output without having a laser system installed. Which probably means it already needs it...
Originally posted by RichardPrice
You are entitled to disagree all you wish, but people have been asking similar questions for hundreds of years.
Originally posted by RichardPrice
In the 1940s and 1950s, there were a lot of people saying the US Navy was 'obsolete' because of air power advances. Oh look, the US still has a fully capable Navy and its still far from obsolete.
Originally posted by RichardPrice
Mounting lasers on ships won't make anti-ship missiles obsolete, any more than the introduction of the Phalanx CIWS did.
Originally posted by RichardPrice
You say that like developing a laser based anti-missile system would be a breeze...
Originally posted by RichardPrice
Right, tell that to the guys on the HMS Sheffield - sunk by an Exocet.
Or how about HMS Ardent, or RFA Sir Galahad, or HMS Coventry - sunk by 1000lb bombs.
Also, I should think the a Mach 4.0 missile with a maximum range of 500 km could withstand direct exposure to the laser for a little while seeing as it can withstand the heat from air friction at that speed.
However to track the incoming vampire, your radar has to see over the horizon anyhow.
I think we could see heavily shielded missels to counter lasers and because of the inherent short range of seaborne lasers it can be overwhelmed somewhat easy.
It will happen, one side will field a missile which has 30cm of high temperature ablative material on the front
Or the missile gets to 50KM out, goes ballistic and then goes 'dumb', requiring no guidance or anything. 2 tonnes of uranium at Mach 10 will put a pretty serious dent in anything.
Its unlikely that any deployed laser will be powered directly from the ships power source, and more likely that it will be powered by buffering energy for a period of time. This allows you to build up gigawatts of power without requiring a huge, dedicated power supply.
This missile can't be stopped. It's a stealth missile. If you can't see it, you can't shoot it down with lasers. It's the world's most advanced antiship missile.
Mounting lasers on ships won't make anti-ship missiles obsolete, any more than the introduction of the Phalanx CIWS did
It takes stupendous power to actually damage or destroy something at a distance with a laser.
Second problem, a solid state laser is about 2% efficient
So any really powerful weapon will by necessity have a very slow rate of fire because of the low efficiency,
Third problem, the atmosphere disrupts and spreads any laser beam,
Fourth problem, a ship pitches and rolls.
Originally posted by Silver Shadow
And a polished mirror finish finish on your missile will completely reflect and scatter any infrared laser pulse of any power..