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Thursday, June 18, 2009

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Paris Air Show wowed by crop-duster

The AT-802 crop-duster

It was a dull and gloomy Paris Air Show, and then came the AT-802 -- a machine-gun totting, bomb-friendly crop-duster. But why would a plane used for farming need James Bond technology? Stephen Beard reports.

The AT-802 crop-duster (www.laneav.com)

More on Agriculture, Airline Industry

TEXT OF STORY

Bill Radke: At this week's Paris Air Show, the atmosphere has been mostly glum. But a highlight has been the debut of a new American plane: a heavily-armed crop duster. From the European Desk in London, Stephen Beard reports.


Stephen Beard: The AT-802 crop-duster comes equipped with three-barrel machine guns, a pair of rocket launchers and a clutch of 500-pound bombs. It's tempting to think that this bizarre contraption was inspired by the movies. Hitchcock, anyone?

Observer: That's funny.

Observer 2: What?

Observer: That plane's dusting crops where there ain't no crops.

Remember the scene in North by Northwest, when Carey Grant comes under attack by a crop-duster? In reality, the AT-802 is designed to spray and destroy illegal drug plantations in Latin America. Such planes often have to dodge bullet and rocket-fire from drug traffickers.

Aviation commentator David Buik says the AT-802 has made a big impression in Paris:

David Buik: Le Bourget Air Show, which has been as dull as ditchwater this year obviously for economic reasons, was brightened up by this James Bond crop-dusting plane turned into a sort of rocket launcher.

No firm orders yet, but the makers, Air Tractor of the U.S., reckons it will sell for less than $5 million, half what its competitors charge for a comparable plane.

In London, this is Stephen Beard for Marketplace.

Comments

  • Comment | Refresh

  • By John G

    From Columbia, SC, 06/21/2009

    It looks like something I'd expect to see at 1/35 scale, decked out with a garish paintjob, and sold in the toy cars section of some big-box discounter, next to the Hypersonic Passenger Jet of Tomorrow and little vehicles with impossibly large engines. Purpose built, to be sure, but as comely as the ungainly hatchling of a condor-sparrow love story gone awry.

    By Nate W

    From MI, 06/18/2009

    Too bad the bright spot has to be in weapons, but it is a bright spot when someone thinks out of the box for a solution that's both cheap and functional, even if not beautiful. Sometimes the inelegant is the most elegant possible!

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