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To: Petronski

I didn't say the research was phony. The initial claims made in the 80s were phony. Most of the stuff is not yet ready for deployment.


18 posted on 06/06/2004 7:30:26 PM PDT by js1138 (In a minute there is time, for decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse. J Forbes Kerry)
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To: js1138

I never claimed you said phony. I quoted your words assiduously.


19 posted on 06/06/2004 7:36:19 PM PDT by Petronski (Some leftists find Bush's very existence to be a "constant oppressive force in their daily psyche.")
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To: js1138; Alamo-Girl
The initial claims made in the 80s were phony

There you go again. Check out the Sprint interceptor. Do you know that it was so reliable, so accurate they had to DE-TUNE it so that it would not smack into the incoming warheads???? And that was 1970's technology...albeit way ahead of its time...

Sprint Anti-Ballistic Missile

In the 1970’s, the Martin Marietta Corporation (now Lockheed Martin) in Orlando, Florida, built what is still today one of the most incredible guided missiles ever to fly. The Sprint was a part of the only anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system that the United States ever deployed. Complementing the long-range Spartan interceptor, which was intended to destroy incoming nuclear warheads before they re-entered the atmosphere, Sprint was a short-range screamer with split-second reactions that could intercept any warheads that got past Spartan when they were only seconds from their targets. Ejected from an underground silo by a hot gas generator, the two-stage Sprint accelerated so fast that it would pass a .50-calibre bullet, if fired at the same time, within a second. Atmospheric friction made the outside skin of the second stage hotter than the inside of the rocket motor. It was protected by a thick ablative layer that actually boiled away, carrying the heat with it. Sprint was tested successfully many times at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico and at the Kwajalein Missile Range in the Pacific. It was beyond-state-of-the-art technology for its day.

This image shows Sprint in its silo. The missile sits on the eject piston, which in turn rests on a ring of springs to cushion the missile from ground shocks. When the gas generator under the piston fires, the piston shoots up the launch tube (stopping when it hits the piston arrestors at the tube mouth) and the Sprint continues out of the cell, literally blasting through the frangible fiberglass, foam and rubber domed cell closure. Tan “wedges” at the missile’s midsection near the second stage fins guide it out the tube. The cutaway shroud near the top of the missile is the “foam sock,” an insulating blanket around the guidance section and warhead that keeps the components at operating temperature at all times.


23 posted on 06/07/2004 5:33:34 AM PDT by Paul Ross (Communism is a mental illness. Historical amnesia is its prerequisite.)
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