Subscribe via RSS

Archives by Date
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008

See all Archives
Archives by Category
'Canes
Afghan Update
Ammo and Munitions
Armor
Around the Globe
Av Week Extra
Axe in Iraq (and Elsewhere)
Bizarro
Blimps
Blog Bidness
Body Armor Blues
Bomb Squad
Brownshoes in Action
Bubbleheads, etc.
Cammo Green
Catch the "Buzz"
Chem-Bio
Civilian Apps
Cloak and Dagger
Commandos
Comms
Contingency Ops
Cops and Robbers
Cyber-warfare
Data Diving
Defense Tech Poll
Dissent Tech
Door Kickers
Drones
DT Administrivia
Eat DT's Dust
Extra! Extra!
Eye on China
Fast Movers
FCS Watch
Fire for Effect
FOS Files
Friday Funnies
Gadgets and Gear
Going Green
Grand Ole Osprey
Ground Vehicles
Guns
Homeland Security
In the Weeds with Eric
Info War
Iraq Diary
Jarhead Jazz
JSF Watch
Just War Theories
Lasers and Ray Guns
Less-lethal
Logistics
Los Alamos and Labs
M4 Monopoly
Medic!
Mercs
Missiles
Money Money Money
Most Wanted
MRAP Edge
Net-Centric
Nukes
Old Skool
Our Shrinking Planet
Planes, Copters, Blimps
Politricks
Polmar's Perspective
Popular Mechanics
Rapid Fire
Raptor Watch
Red Team
Retro-Futuro
Robots
Roll Your Own
Sabra Tech
Ships and Subs
Snipertech
Space
Special Ops
Star Wars
Strategery
Stray Trons
Tactical Development
Terror Tech
The Deadlies
The Defense Biz
The Peoples' Site
The Sunday Paper
The Tanker Tango
The View from Av Week
Those Nutty Norks
Training and Sims
Trimble on the Case
Video Lounge
War Update
Ward'z Wonderz
You can run...

See all Archives
Newsletters

Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

"LASER RIFLE" DESIGN A HOAX

It's the kind of proposal that makes sci-fi dorks (including this one) quiver with anticipation: a 1999 design, found by DefenseReview, for a real-life laser rifle.

So when I read about the far-out sounding "Gasdynamic Laser Weapon" on Slashdot, I fell for it.

Without reading too carefully, I bought the gobbledygook about the Stavatti Corporation using streams of carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and helium gases to help generate pulses of laser light. And I swallowed when I called the company, and was told the president was out of town, looking for government funding.

But Defense Tech's readers are smarter than its editor, and they immediately called bullshit.

"Looks like an April Fool's gag," is how several readers described the rifle design.

"A very elaborate gag," added another. "Obviously written by an insider."

A third noted newsgroup posts from 2002 calling Stavatti's designs for an "F-26" airplane into question.

But the kicker came from Stavatti's own website:

The company is the first in history to double as a drum maker and a defense contractor, you see.

Stavatti Percussion conducts the retail sale of percussion products Stavattiís founder and current CEO, Christopher R. Beskar, plays the bagpipes. Early in his piping career, Mr. Beskar joined a bagpipe band. This band was in need of drummers to play the snare in accompaniment of the pipes. Mr. Beskarís brother Shawn joined the band and became an accomplished pipe band snare drummer capable of Grade 2 competition while yet in High School. Later on, Shawn became CFO of Stavatti. While serving as CFO, Shawn began marketing Premier Pipe Band Products under a business entity designated DSDC.

DSDC focused exclusively on the sale of high performance pipe band drums and accessory products. Reselling Snares, Bass and Tenor drums to pipe bands throughout the Midwest, in 1996 DSDC became a division of Stavatti Corporation known as Stavatti Percussion.

Concentrating upon the value added resale of pipe band percussion products, Stavatti can address all your pipe band drumming needs!

And Stavatti doesn't just design any weapons. "Stavatti builds space fighters," the company website says.

"We know what threats are out there. A 9mm just wonít cut it when you are facing 30 ft tall insectoids, or the reptile alien overlords from Rigel."

To battle these baddies, of course, you need a laser rifle.

THERE'S MORE: Stavatti CEO Chris Baskar insists his company is legit. But he can't produce a single customer for his high-tech arms buisiness.

In a phone interview from a Virgina hotel room, Baskar claims that he has "60 people in the company." But when pressed, he admits that all but three "are essentially assisting on a pro bono basis."

He also says he sees nothing wrong with a company trying market laser rifles and drums at the same time. Yamaha, he notes, makes drums, pianos -- and motorocycles, too.

What about the statements on his site about using his Stavatti guns to stop "alien overlords"?

"It indicates a little bit of classified work," he replies. "Other than that, it's humor."

Comments

Chris Beskar is a respected member of the aviation community and serves on technical committees for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (http://www.aiaa.org/content.cfm?pageid=234&id=75). He also manages the annual national design competition that is held each year (http://www.aiaa.org/content.cfm?pageid=224). His work gained national prominence recently when his Machete design was highlighted in a Rand Report which was a study on counterinsurgency aircraft for the Air Force (Aviation Week 14 August 2006). History is full of scientists and engineers that were called crack-pots during their time, and were reported as visionaries by later generations. I for one, am going to join some of the others out there who are keeping an eye on this high-tech visionary.

Posted by: Kevin at July 18, 2007 09:39 PM


I just came home on leave when I made the mistake of walking into the old WWII barracks building at Fleming Field in South St. Paul. I was still wearing my Army officer's uniform when I walked in looking for some old model planes I built there when the Civil Air Patrol rented it years ago. I never saw a couple of guys looking so giddy all of the sudden when they thought the DoD actually bought into their designs. I had to disappoint them though. I had no idea what Stavatti was. It looked like a couple of guys with aerospace engineering degrees who wanted to build planes. As for me, I still can't find those models.

Posted by: Dave at February 2, 2007 10:03 AM


I might be usefull to know that Chris's ideas have been called, not only valid, but among the most original from all current sources by a former highly placed IDA source who reviewed them. The source was an analyst specializing in air superiority fighter design and the mission requirements conformance of new fighters.

Posted by: Kenneth Happel at December 29, 2006 07:40 PM


This guy didn't pop on the scene overnight and create a hoax web site. I do flight test engineering professionally for the government, with a specialty in Directed Energy weapons. I've watched him for years. Let's just say he's reaching a little further than others.

The TIS-1 white paper document is a vehicle in a classic military funding cycle. Nothing more, nothing less. A white paper, or concept paper, call is typically done by large government funding programs before generating specifications and an RFP. Topics of white papers are rarely "real". They are definitely visionary goals. I've written them from the outside. I've reviewed them from inside of government.

A Defense Tech editor says he "fell for it", and other readers "called bullshit".
http://www.defensetech.org/archives/000009.html

"Fell for it" as in believed it was a production weapon or a prototype? Nobody claimed that. It's intended to be a reach (15-25 years by the Army's request, the time between the end of WWII and humans stepping on the moon).

"Called bullshit" - called what bullshit? The existence of the TIS-1 weapon? Nobody claimed that. Check the white paper, especially the technological risk section, which highlights the uncertain.

Some week when you're bored, check the history of the person behind Stavatti. Recover prior versions of his website from archives, or talk to him. Last I knew, he's a married guy with one child. Names and places are real -- just maybe not what you expect. He demonstrated hot shot technical skills through high school that put him at the college level. During college, he demonstrated skills that put him at a unique entrepreneurial level.

He'd like to do this more as funded work with paid employees, but in the mean time fills the gap and feeds his family as a Class III fire arms dealer, and musical instrument dealer.

If you reach into the white paper, you'll find things like a 3500F black body radiator held in your hand. It's on the edge. That said, let me tell you a funny story I heard once about two guys really interested in lift and drag. They built this hodge-podge wind tunnel with spare lumber from shipping pallets. The experts ridiculed them because they had no prior aviation products and fed their family fixing bicycle tires...

Posted by: Brian at August 25, 2005 02:35 PM


Post a comment




Remember Me?


Please enter the code as seen in the image below to post your comment.