December1, 2006:
The U.S. Air Force, which has a lot of security troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan, wanted to come up with a better, and less lethal, way to stop
civilian vehicles trying to race through check points. Currently, U.S. troops
simply open fire, because the vehicle could be (and sometimes is) a suicide
bomber. To address problem, the air force formed two teams, each of six
engineers, and gave them $60,000 (for materials) and six months, and ordered
them to come up with ways to stop these vehicles with minimal damage to the
occupants. The two teams came up with several good ideas, all of which were
recently tested using remotely controlled SUVs. The most promising device is
simply a wooden wedge, that can be moved aside to let traffic pass. But if a
vehicle tries to run over it, the vehicle wheels end up off the ground and
spinning uselessly, with the vehicle jerked to a sudden stop. A similar concept
used remotely triggered airbags to lift up, and halt, the vehicle. In both
cases, the systems were tested against vehicles moving at about 55 kilometers
an hour. Both systems work, in large part, because the vehicles are forced to
slow down to negotiate a series of fixed barriers, used to channel traffic to
the check point.
There
are already several barrier systems for stopping vehicles, if you don't mind
destroying the vehicle and its passengers. The problem here is stopping
vehicles that try to rush through a lane being used to inspect vehicles at a
checkpoint, without risking the lives of the passengers in the vehicle. The air
force expects to send some of these new devices to Iraq early next year.