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US delays missile-zapping laser test for 4th time

The test involving the Airborne Laser Test Bed was to have taken place Sunday morning off the California coast. A new date for the experiment will be set for the coming week.

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US delays missile-zapping laser test for 4th time
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An intercept test of a missile-destroying laser aboard a converted Boeing Co 747 aircraft has been postponed for a fourth time because of technical problems, the Pentagon's Missile Defence Agency said.

"Troubleshooting indicates that a hot bypass valve on the aircraft is in an abnormal condition, thus not allowing for proper component cooling," the agency said in a statement on its website. "The team is evaluating the potential causes."

The test involving the Airborne Laser Test Bed was to have taken place Sunday morning off the California coast. A new date for the experiment will be set for the coming week, the announcement said.

The goal is to destroy a simulated enemy ballistic missile in flight more than 100 miles away, or about twice the range demonstrated in a maiden test on February 11 using a chemical oxygen iodine laser aboard the jumbo jet. The laser heats the boosting ballistic missile's skin, weakening it and causing failure from high-speed flight stress.

The previous postponements took place over roughly the past three weeks. They were attributed by the agency, in turn, to a problem with a stand designed to hold the target before launch, a tracking system software glitch and, on Tuesday, a problem with a tracking camera's cooling system that prompted a system reboot.

Army Lieutenant General Patrick O'Reilly, the agency chief, said the first two delays reflected safety concerns and a limited pool of target ballistic missiles that represent the perceived threat from countries such as Iran and North Korea.

Boeing provides the aircraft, battle management and overall systems integration for the flying ray run. Northrop Grumman Corp supplies the megawatt-class laser and Lockheed Martin Corp supplies the beam control.

The successful test in February prompted calls on the Pentagon to restore funding for further development of the system.

Defence secretary Robert Gates cut it to a research effort last year from a development program headed for possible deployment.

Boeing, the prime contractor, said in February that the system's initial success, in a test against a short-range missile in its boost phase, had "blazed a path for a new generation of high-energy, ultra-precision weaponry." 

Some experts have said it could have potential use against enemy fighter aircraft, cruise missiles or even low-earth orbit satellites.

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