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@ingamgoduka572 ай бұрын
But why we can't get the Israel base satellite data after Iran Attack?
@markc67142 ай бұрын
Congratulations. You've assured I'll never use ground news. I hate sitting through forced ads, so that's their punishment
@ToyaRobbins2 ай бұрын
@markc6714 there's a fast forward feature - use it.
@ryelor1232 ай бұрын
"more to fewer" not "more to less" yo.
@garycope42382 ай бұрын
More ads for ground news rather than actual news, crap vid, crap click bait channel..
@paulwood67292 ай бұрын
Congrats on 500k, very well deserved.
@alexschoep71262 ай бұрын
This channel sucks now, to everyone save The Count from Sesame Street.
@TheInfamousMrFox2 ай бұрын
@@alexschoep7126 Why does it "suck", recently minted blank profile guy?
@StrangerHappened2 ай бұрын
Still milking the fantasy that open-air storages is the totality of storages. Ukraine’s Syrsky reports RU now has more artillery, tanks and MRLS than ever all while this channel makes those ridiculous videos on how RU is running out of everything. Year after year. And it never comes.
@twplayer19992 ай бұрын
@@StrangerHappened he's always said they will run out a some point not they are out of them
@StrangerHappened2 ай бұрын
@@twplayer1999 tge Issue it never happens because RU is not really running out of anything. Production has drastically increased, RU added 700K workers to the medal on industry, which now totals 3.7M
@Skaldewolf2 ай бұрын
I still can't believe some random guy with a bit of cash can simply order satellite images from basically every place imaginable and can do the job of a NRO-analyst with image-quality that would have most cold warriors drool with envy.
@alexcane44982 ай бұрын
I wonder what OSInt's version of the discovery of the Caspian Sea Monster will be....
@equarg2 ай бұрын
Not to mention WW1 and WW2 spies would literally kill for that kind of intel.
@neilwilson57852 ай бұрын
I'm an old dude and am a bit future shocked by the rapid advance of tech, especially in the last 5 years. AI, drones, precision weapons. Oh, and advances in medicine.
@Lock4842 ай бұрын
What I cant believe m, is that Russia, knowing very well about the capabilities of satellites these days, still stores it's critically important ordnance just straight in a bare field, just exposed to the wide world to see... Like at least build a shed above the equipment?! 👀 Or just put A MOTOFUKIN TARP OVER THE STUFF!!! This is just ridiculous bro 😖😂😂
@TheArklyte2 ай бұрын
@@Lock484 yeah, fields of tarp tents would be absolutely not suspicious 😅 Russia hides high priority equipment from satellites and that's TELs for ICBMs and SAMs and planes. If they would hide everything, the amount of effort to hide would outrun any benefit of enemy not knowing about the equipment.
@jcchow662 ай бұрын
Tremendous work by the open-source community. Would be interesting to get a sense for how many taken from storage are due to creation of new MLRS units, how many due to attrition and how many due to wear-and-tear. In principle, MLRS trucks and tubes seem like they would be relatively inexpensive to manufacture.
@AgentK-im8ke2 ай бұрын
they are pretty easy to build especially when your country prepared for WW3 for decades, they are just restarting new factories, modernizing them and building more modern stuff in there
@rogerk61802 ай бұрын
You can get an idea of how many where lost by looking at independent sources that collect data on this. For the rest it is mostly guess work where they are going. One thing this does show, where ever they where going, the supply is at the end now and they will have to mostly do with what they have and what is lost can no longer be replaced.
@TomTomicMic2 ай бұрын
@@AgentK-im8ke If Russia prepared for decades they didn't do a good job, their new factories are similar to old soviet factories or worse being of poor quality and low inefficient production, that's if they can get the manpower to run them!?!
@tuehojbjerg9692 ай бұрын
@@AgentK-im8ke except they are not nothing really point to them modernizing anything but sending it directly to the frontline, and they are not making any modern stuff
@skipperclinton10872 ай бұрын
@@AgentK-im8ke: Russia/USSR never demobilized after the cold war was over. They just put everything in storage. 9000 tanks alone including T-54/55s. Russia/USSR is and always has been an aggressive country with their eyes always fixed on conquest.
@wardasz2 ай бұрын
"The TOS-1 is actually a flamethrower" - lol. Yea, the name mean "Heavy Flamethrower System" and officially russians call it that way... but it does not change a fact that it IS MLRS. It fire rocket (multiple at at the time) with thermobaric warhead, not a jet of flames like flamethrower.
@HereticalKitsune2 ай бұрын
Dunno, but the TOS-1 looks just very cool and dangerous to me. Wouldn't want to be at the other end of it due to its particular ammo, tho!
@vibecheck27872 ай бұрын
Either way they are irrelevant as none were seen in storage
@TheDeludedFactor2 ай бұрын
But TOS-1 is not a MLRS artillery due to its incredibly short effective range. Therefore, it wouldn't make sense to include them on the calculations anyway since all the other's are actual MLRS artillery systems.
@peterroe29932 ай бұрын
@@TheDeludedFactor it's used as artillery, even though it's very short range, it serves the same function.
@omfghai2u2 ай бұрын
@@TheDeludedFactor It is a system that launches multiple rockets, or as you might call it; multiple launch rocket system.
@luminyam61452 ай бұрын
Congratulations on 500k. Excellent video, thank you.
@richardcutts1962 ай бұрын
Isn't the problem with Soviet/Russian rocket artillery that the individual rockets are packed in wooden crates. Before they can fire them each rocket has to be removed from its crate then individually loaded into a launch tube. Western systems have the rockets, however many the launch vehicle fires, fired directly from their storage container. So instead of loading 40, or however many, rockets into tubes the west just has a magazine of rockets loaded onto the launcher and fires it.
@jarink12 ай бұрын
The Czech RM-70 was one of the only Warsaw Pact MLRS to try to speed up reloading. It was a BM-21 style 40 tube 122mm launcher, but had 40 rounds of reloads in a rack in the middle of the truck. The launcher could be aligned with the rack, allowing the rockets to be easily fed into it. While not palletized like the M270/M142, it did substantially speed up at least the first reload.
@Daokl2 ай бұрын
It's not a problem if you have millions of rockets in crates against a hundred thousand in pods. So both sides fire millions of rockets from ex-soviet platforms because both launchers and rockets are cheap and available and there's so much less pod-based systems from both sides.
@Statueshop2972 ай бұрын
@@Daoklit is a massive problem. Someone has to stack those crates at armouries. More people have to hand load them onto transport. More people have to unload them to be distributed. More people have to load them up and then they need to be unloaded at the final point. Then each crate has to be opened and the rocket hand loaded. Literally hundreds of man hours that a forklift and modern logistics could do 100 times quicker with 10x fewer people.
@cathulhu-q7y2 ай бұрын
@@Daoklthere is a massive difference between handloading a dozen 220mm rockets with several hundred kilos weight each from individual crates per launcher and having the launcher vehicle extend a loading crane, drop off the emptied launch tube container and loading a fresh one. The difference is like handloading an ak47 magazine after you fired your 30 rounds to switching to a Read and full magazine. M270 and m142 take less than 1/10 the time to reload and can be reloaded by a single person. Prepared pods are easier to transport and are easier to logistics, meaning you lessen the burdon on your logistics train from the depot to the front.
@Daokl2 ай бұрын
@@cathulhu-q7y everything has a special loading vehicle, so you can handload them, but generally (from 220 and up) don't have to. You can lose some loading vehicles, but one can handle a few mlrs, since they don't fire near ammo depots so while they travel you reset loading vehicle. Sure pod is faster, but you have to have special crane in each vehicle, so they cost more, like a lot. Same with pods, they have more volume per missile, much more expensive and have to be loaded/unloaded by special equipment at each leg. You think one missile is heavy, try to move a pod from a truck to a van by hand (since your loader is smoking pile of rubble). So in one depot or train you'd have a lot more individual rockets and all you need to move them is some idle hands. So you can shot your 5 preloaded magazines faster, but in this case your opponent would have more rifles and much more ammo. So either you will fire less to conserve it or fire everything fast and then sit and take their fire. This is why only guided munitions are made for himars and Ukraine only been given 50 or so launchers, not 500. And what you have in pod is what you have to launch - there's a lot more variety in rockets for soviet mlrs - flame, thermo, mines, auto-targeting submunitions, etc - whatever fits, even uav's. But most recent russian mlrs does use pods (one they adopted a few decades ago didn't stick), one before that has loading crane on it, so maybe they finally seen the light.
@viandengalacticspaceyards51352 ай бұрын
Such things are impressive and devastating when they hit. However, loading 40 rockets by hand is a bit of a bother, and they are not easy to hide.
@Statueshop2972 ай бұрын
It’s a manpower intensive job. Russian logistics in general are not great. It’s a bit who needs forklifts when we have men. I suppose one positive is they won’t run out of fire wood
@Warren_Peace2 ай бұрын
It is the exact opposite. They are very easy to hide as opposed to large pods. All you really have to do is find some wood or a barn or even just a large enough garage to hide in, and you can load at leisure.
@viandengalacticspaceyards51352 ай бұрын
@@Warren_Peace Sorry, what do you mean by 'large pods' ?
@Warren_Peace2 ай бұрын
@@viandengalacticspaceyards5135 It is what they call the containers in which the rockets and missiles are loaded in. Essentially, instead of loading every tube with munitions, some systems directly install new ones, usually with a crane.
@Statueshop2972 ай бұрын
@@Warren_Peace you can use a drops pallet to unload a M270 rocket pod from a truck in under a minute. The rocket launcher then uses its in built crane to unload and load the complete pod. It can be done by 1 truck driver and the 3 crew of the M270 Versus hand moving everything 1 at a time. Opening all the crates individually. Every forces that has used both systems prefers the ease of the M270
@Siege1812 ай бұрын
I would like to add my voice to the chorus that sings Covert Cabals praises! Amazing content
@luca-pk5ff2 ай бұрын
Love your work. I watch and rewatch a lot of your videos
@PT5-Shorts2 ай бұрын
Congratulations on 500k
@peterlesinky63702 ай бұрын
Thank you once again for the info.
@michaelruscak42512 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@oneshotme2 ай бұрын
I very much enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
@marcusott29732 ай бұрын
Much awaited, much appreciated looking forward to excellent insights as always from you.
@themaskedarabrussian2 ай бұрын
Mr Cabal, welcome back! We missed you...
@runningbear88952 ай бұрын
Love every vid and detail. Hats off to you!
@PM_822 ай бұрын
Thx again Covert Cabal, really good video's supported by facts instead of fake news or propaganda.
@DB5652-v3rАй бұрын
you gullible individual
@SargentGunnery2 ай бұрын
Thank you for all the work you do!
@sod12372 ай бұрын
Thanks for your work. No way i can honor this enough. Please keep going!
@beatreuteler2 ай бұрын
According to Juzzie There are 1223 MLRS systems destroyed since early 2022. Assuming "pre war" Russia had 1000 such systems in the lining-up for the war (including new builds and repairs that were started already) and assuming the 1474 listed here as pre was storage are not included in that number, Russia would have had a total number of 2474 MLRS systems pre war and would have some 1251 units left in total including the ones in storage. This said the number in usage would have shrunk from more than 1000 in early 2024 to some 912 units. Representing a loss rate of 10% in 6 Months or 20 % in a year. This would suggest the reduction on storage since pre war is merely representing the backfills of losses. In other words, one could expect the storage be more or less fully depleted in 1 year from now.
@cv990a42 ай бұрын
That there are already vids of Russian improvised MLRS presumably means it's already having a tough time finding a sufficient number. You don't improvise unless there's a problem getting the standard stuff.
@ivanlagrossemoule2 ай бұрын
@@cv990a4 However you have to be careful what conclusions are drawn here. By that I mean that if they can't find enough systems to fit all new formations, it's not the same as trying to sustain existing ones. Basically they'll start fielding improvised systems before they reach the peak in total active systems, before they even start declining.
@deansmits0062 ай бұрын
Sounds great!
@CEDFTW2 ай бұрын
@@cv990a4not necessarily this is Russia we are talking about their logistics are terrible, improvising might mean they can't get the available systems to the front not necessarily they don't exist. (Though if I was betting they don't exist) However a similar problem happened for Russia with food in WW1 people in Petrograd were starving to death while boats full of grain for export in the black sea sat there so long the grain spoiled.
@shanerooney72882 ай бұрын
🤔 I'm not following your math... If the numbers in storage have gone down faster than the number destroyed, then the numbers in use should have gone up.
@Harmon1ca2 ай бұрын
*Stannis grumble* “Fewer.”
@Voxdalian2 ай бұрын
77% taken out of storage in 32 months means it'll be less than 10 months before anything usable is taken out of storage, after which they'll face more problems, that means August 2025. So MLRS is another type of weapon/vehicle you put on the increasingly long list that Russia will have a severe shortage of before the end of 2025.
@andrewl91802 ай бұрын
Probably slightly earlier as some systems are beyond reasonable repair. Some may have been raised for spare parts to repair the others also. The real question is how many are now in service. Ukraine has destroyed a lot but it's possible the number in service has also been increasing. Less an issue with MLRS which dont wear out their barrels than with standard artilary where the barrel is only good for a certain number of shots before it wears.
@AlexejGubin2 ай бұрын
Thank you and Jompy for this hard but very important work! It is mind-boggling to see these numbers.
@HidingAllTheWay2 ай бұрын
TOS is not a "flamethrower", but a heavy MLRS with thermobaric warheads. The confusion comes from the fact that thermobaric weapons are reffered as "flamethrowers" by Russia, but they really aren't.
@autochton2 ай бұрын
We're still talking a short-range (a mere 4 km), specialized weapon that does not really fit the role of MLRS proper. So leaving it out of this count makes good sense.
@onri_2 ай бұрын
@@autochton 10km* Tos-1a has 10k range.
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
TOS is a very specialized tool. Yes it shoots rockets but if this is the logic then ships are MLRS and Helicopters can be MLRS too. The army that produced the system decided that it can't fit the same role of other things they classify as MLRS so it was never part of any artillery group/force. Some tanks can do indirect fire - but they are not classified as an artillery, some plains drop bombs but are not bombers. If you want to think of it as an MLRS - you are free to do so.
@hedgehog31802 ай бұрын
Most militaries would classify these kinds of systems alongside flamethrowers and they're generally operated by engineering units. This isn't really unique to Russia as flame weapons are just generally considered a unique type of weapon meant for specialized tasks.
@the_undead2 ай бұрын
If we classify this thing as an MLRS system then anyone who has launched multiple bottle rockets has used a multiple launch rocket system. So I don't know if I'd go down that road personally. Also, it has a range of 10 km which is basically nothing when we're talking about a modern battlefield
@RTmadnesstoo2 ай бұрын
Amazing Report! Great information! Thanks.
@James-rl5tj2 ай бұрын
Russian production of armored vehicles is heavily weighted towards reconditioning old stock. Stock that is running low. Their war production is expected to peak in 2025 then will drop precipitously until it stops at the level of new unit production, which is much lower than losses. Many analysts believe the summer of 2024 will be known as the high point of russian power in this war.
@rogerk61802 ай бұрын
They regenerated a lot of new forces the last 2 years. But now have reached a point where what they have is what they have. Less and less replacements for stuff that is gone now.
@neilbadger42622 ай бұрын
Something else to consider is that the unemployment rate in Russia is now extremely low which is not actually a good thing. And as Russia continues to conscript or persuade people to fight in Ukraine, the less people Russia will have working in the factories. There is already an issue where Factories are having to pay higher and higher wages to people to try and keep them from joining the military.
@kalinmir2 ай бұрын
It will be interesting to see what new wartime stuff we will see after they run out the old stuff...but if I had to guess they'll likely get access to chinas's scarp
@etienne81102 ай бұрын
That looks like prevision if nothing else is done. Like new plants, increased turnout etc... I guess the russians have those numbers too, know it and will act on it, no? Planning for your ennemy to do nothing/act stupid isn t a smart plan. (The ennemy can be stupid, but expecting him to be is a recipe for disaster)
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
@@etienne8110 Thank you for adding that. I laugh at the ppl that count the minutes with anticipation when Russia will finish stock of this or that. The factories that now refurbish are being prepared for production of new material when the old is gone. Soo the production of new things will jump rapidly. Also a lot of equipment is being repaired close to frontlines - so it can return to the front multiple times. I have no clue why ppl think war is something static and sides are not constantly adapting. Every time we see something old on the front - "this should be the end, they are tapped out". Reality is a very very different beast. The war will continue until the sides will want to continue and decide enough is enough. Probably Russia will not go to massive production of Tanks or artilleries - but from the current increase of drones it is likely they shift massively in to that. Some souses say that for 2024 more than 1.7 million drones where delivered to the army so far. If 2025 means less tanks but again 3-4 times increase in delivered drones, this can be the adaptation required.
@bc-guy8522 ай бұрын
Incredible amount of work you and your team do on our behalf - thank you!
@Steve-nz6ek2 ай бұрын
Crazy how many have been lost
@eduwino1512 ай бұрын
HIMARS showed up and Russia started loosing Grads massively
@crakkbone2 ай бұрын
People? I know… it’s really sad. Oh you mean these missile trucks? Nvm..
@TheStephaneAdam2 ай бұрын
@cubefreak123 True that. We tend to notice systems being destroyed because it's spectacular but it's amazing how much stuff and people a military will burn though just *operating*.
@CEDFTW2 ай бұрын
@cubefreak123Yea I remember that one clip going around of them trying to hammer a missle into the launcher using an ammo crate. Between the operators and barrel wear I'd bet that's why the few systems they saw missing the rocket pods were like that.
@Stratigoz2 ай бұрын
@@eduwino151 What himars? All got destroyed or left hiding to avoid detection lmao.
@adrianlang65502 ай бұрын
This was very interesting. Thanks to everyone involved.
@jackbenny44582 ай бұрын
Thank you! It's great seeing facts and not "I saw it in a dream" type figures when it comes to Russian military storage.
@bigsarge20852 ай бұрын
Interesting, thanks for the update.
@ChosenOne66662 ай бұрын
Russia took a massive L to Mighty Mouse
@usun_politics10332 ай бұрын
Ghost of Kiiiv reports
@ChosenOne66662 ай бұрын
@@usun_politics1033 LEGENDS
@DerDop2 ай бұрын
@@usun_politics1033 That SU -34 lost today might have a word with you.
@what42882 ай бұрын
Russia lost to Demetrious Johnson?
@lazyman75052 ай бұрын
@@DerDop It looks like it was traded for entire Patriot battery, not sure who came on top.
@rochrich12232 ай бұрын
Nice report. Of course, low pressure tubes mounted on trucks would be easier to produce than the rockets needed to feed them. I found it interesting that even with the war revealing a severe starting shortage of tactical supply trucks and losing so many, there were still trucks in storage!? I expect they are mostly parts trucks.
@sjonnieplayfull58592 ай бұрын
Empty husks. No engine, no transmission, no fuel tank, no seats, no nothing inside Or at least, that would be my guess, but I can't prove it
@Statueshop2972 ай бұрын
Imagine the work required to get a used 30 year old truck that’s been parked in Russian weather for 20+ years running reliably and then keep it running for the duration of the war. Wow
@hedgehog31802 ай бұрын
There's likely also a bottleneck in refurbishment capabilities and most new production is probably being dedicated to weapons rather than the less sexy supply vehicles.
@rochrich12232 ай бұрын
Quite right. Since they haven't pulled these out of the bases despite a shortage severe enough to resort to Chinese golf carts, the initial decision to keep them was dubious. The decision to keep them another year became blatantly stupid unless it was for a non-practical reason, like propaganda or graft.(If you get paid well to maintain each truck, you keep as many as you can, especially those you don't do anything for.)
@cisarovnajosefina45252 ай бұрын
meanwhile poland already ordered 486 himars from the US and some south korean equivalents
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
How many have been delivered? I haven't heard anything since they made the announcement.
@SirenHead002 ай бұрын
poland doesnt wanna be bossed around no mode
@shawnr7712 ай бұрын
@@MrRatludDelivery is set to start in 2025.
@lacdirk2 ай бұрын
@@shawnr771 And will take well over a decade to complete, as Lockheed Martin produces under 100 Himars per year (for all buyers).
@hyhhy2 ай бұрын
@@SirenHead00 Are they going to leave the EU?
@PeanutsDadForever2 ай бұрын
Thank you for another excellent video!
@hyphen26122 ай бұрын
Russian MLRS vehicles are high value targets to Ukranian drone operators. As soon as they spot one, they'd try to attack it. Those MLRS have no virtually no armor against this type of attacks, making them very easy targets to destroy.
@simonfrederiksen1042 ай бұрын
Great effort - thanks for this!
@Peaky172 ай бұрын
Let's take a moment to appreciate the Russian bots that comment on this video. Thank your for the boost to the algorithm
@Statueshop2972 ай бұрын
I will take a guess at the Answers without looking first. 1) the storage has went down as they are all modernised and sitting somewhere else now nobody can see. 2) it doesn’t mean they are destroyed there are loads more in service now. 3) oryx is not accurate at all.
@mountainmanmike10142 ай бұрын
@@kameronjones7139 then explain why
@nikolaideianov50922 ай бұрын
@@kameronjones7139 while i do agree that oryx isnt accurate I dont think we would agree on the reason Oryx simply due to the need of photos wont be accurate Not every vehicles is photoed or well has anything left to photo Oryx is the bottom the numbers can not be lower
@heyhoe1682 ай бұрын
Fair enough. However some people just cope with "bot" jokes, because they know they are on the wrong side of the history.
@bigboy8982 ай бұрын
@@Statueshop297yes oryx is not accurate. Russos real loss count is way bigger than oryxs count. 🤣
@williamperry012 ай бұрын
This makes my day!!!!! Thanks kid!!!!
@marcusott29732 ай бұрын
Wonder how long it's going to take for them to as N Korea gor some of their MLRS systems?
@orlock202 ай бұрын
It's more about the rockets. The MLRSs are needed for the parades.
@marcusott29732 ай бұрын
@@orlock20 so Kim will give them rockets and a box of really long matches? Like Wile E. Coyote got from the ACME company?
@orlock202 ай бұрын
@@marcusott2973 Same quality and same no refunds.
@highjumpstudios23842 ай бұрын
I want to believe
@newyorkskier2 ай бұрын
Brilliant analysis
@Syndr12 ай бұрын
Jeez, if only the Soviets made more for Putin.
@erikvannik52082 ай бұрын
They did The problem is that it only took Yeltsin 10 years to reduce it to dust, for example Russias tank fleet went from 65000 to ~10000 operational
@erikvannik52082 ай бұрын
Like look at 4:35 We see that there were over 7000 storage bases different sizes from small bases with little garages with capacity 10 or less up to a humongous arsenals storing over 1000s pieces of different military vehicles ALL packed back in Soviet days
@TomTomicMic2 ай бұрын
He had vodka money from the scrap man!?!
@erikvannik52082 ай бұрын
@@TomTomicMic yea that's basically it
@erikvannik52082 ай бұрын
@@TomTomicMic I will actually claim more and say that Kim's 50 and China 1500 (claimed) nukes are just gifts from Yeltsin and later Putin
@alabamacoastie69242 ай бұрын
Love this channel!
@196cupcake2 ай бұрын
8:38, removed rocket pods: cannibalizations of truck parts over time until it makes more sense to remove the rocket part than replace the truck parts.
@mbj__2 ай бұрын
Impressive analyzis. As always 👍👏
@RN14412 ай бұрын
Given that I've been reading articles from very serious publications about how the Russians are out of Bombs, Shells, Planes, Men, Tanks, Trucks, Artillery pieces, Missiles, Ships, and diet coke since March 2022, I guess it will be true one of these years.
@GlobalSecurityorg2 ай бұрын
Your work continues to be unsurpassed !!! When we first started playing with pixels back in the 1980s, one central question was whether satellite imagery would merely depict and illustrate the news, or whether imagery would discover and make news. Your work is clearly in the later category - you are telling us things that are important and not otherwise knowable.
@commonsenseisntcommon17762 ай бұрын
Why is Putin continuing to fight Ukraine? Go home!!!
@Zeptus14882 ай бұрын
That's why the war started, Russians wanna go home.
@southseasflying2 ай бұрын
I'd imagine the reason is very similar to why the US continues to fight in Syria - resources.
@adamhall52982 ай бұрын
@@southseasflying Unlike Russia in Ukraine, the US is not looking down the barrel of demographic disaster by continuing to fight in Syria. At this rate, the cost is ridiculously high, even by Russian standards.
@southseasflying2 ай бұрын
@@adamhall5298 The birth rate in Russia is 1.49 children per woman. Birth rate in the US is 1.66 children per woman. Source for both is the World Bank 2021 national birth rate statistics. Additionally Americans die to drug overdoses more than Russians die to Ukrainians (151,042 deaths in 2023 according to the US CDC - the lowest in 10 years), while according to Radio Free Europe (July 29, 2021) Russian overdose deaths are 5% that of the US at 7812 in 2021 (last statistic I could find easily). Figured I'd hit the "they're dying just as fast of alcohol poisoning" argument now - the alcohol problems in Russia don't directly kill but rather contributes to the dramatically lower life expectancy. The minimum birth rate to sustain a population is 2.1 children per woman. Other NATO countries are worse off than the US on birthrates (UK is 1.56, Germany is 1.58, and Italy is 1.25), and US Asian allies make Russia look like a font of fertility (South Korea is 0.81 and Japan is 1.33-1.16). So the argument of "they're failing faster than us" isn't that great. If you think I'm in error, come to me with numbers (and sources) and I'd be happy to discuss them. American superiority over Russia in economy, industry, technology, and population is obvious on its face - I'm not sure why people have to come here making bad faith arguments. Or is this just about excuse US actions while trying to paint US enemies as bad for doing the same thing? EDIT: Sorry, I thought this reply was to my figures showing life expectancy and average age of soldiers in the field for Russia, Ukraine and UK as a control.
@lacdirk2 ай бұрын
@@southseasflying The US isn't fighting in Syria (which has no resources to speak of anyway). No NATO country has fought a real war like Russia is doing now, since it was created.
@jpa50382 ай бұрын
Just another Soviet relic fast approaching zero.
@Woozi12 ай бұрын
Relic or not its still deadly AF. In war, nothing is relic or useless as long as it kills. Ukranians are still using weapons from WW2
@braxxian2 ай бұрын
The Soviets threw down the Nazis with this kind of equipment. Don’t mock it.
@Zeptus14882 ай бұрын
@@braxxianAnd they'll do it again 😂😂😂
@jpa50382 ай бұрын
@@braxxian The US built the factories that made this stuff. It's top of the line stuff for WWII but that was 80 years ago. Almost everything that the Russians use has no place on a modern day battlefield.
@jpa50382 ай бұрын
@@Woozi1 Ukraine isn't claiming to be the #2 military in the world though. They're fighting a war of survival. They get a pass for having no other choice but to use this stuff. What's Russia's excuse?
@wishingb58592 ай бұрын
This makes me so happy! I can't wait for all of the categories to be gone!
@toto-yf8tc2 ай бұрын
Don't tell me you believe that BS 😂😂😂😂😂 most people here get their copium knowing it is pure BS
@wishingb58592 ай бұрын
@@toto-yf8tc Yes, I do believe the satellite images.
@quadpumped342 ай бұрын
@@wishingb5859 its not like no new stuff is being manufactored, all these sattelites see is old stuff thats rotting away out in the open, but the war-industrial machinery hasn't ceased production of new, perhaps more effective systems. Russians have been running out of missiles for 2 straight years.
@MyulMang2 ай бұрын
@@wishingb5859 Not really. Dont trust these specific channels. The Militrary Show, United24,Oryx etc
@MyulMang2 ай бұрын
@@wishingb5859 And dont trust this channel too i forgot its name but it starts with something like A. It provides both false info and propaganda from both russia and ukraine and mixes it up
@Greatshadowfighter2 ай бұрын
Nice video!
@Tentacl2 ай бұрын
Been readin this since the first week of this war.
@sebastiaanl98762 ай бұрын
You must be blind
@piotrd.48502 ай бұрын
7:04 improvised or not, that is hellish idea.
@richardburgess86572 ай бұрын
Appreciate your work. Thank you. 😎
@Discostick552 ай бұрын
So according to these counts, they took approx 1100 MLRS from storage, and Ukranian daily losses show 1230 destroyed MLRS, makes me think those daily losses stats are pretty accurate.
@brookwhiteman98102 ай бұрын
There has been days where it's actually lower than the confirmed losses. And that was me counting the losses and I knew what days the footage was taken from. When you watch a recon strike unit destroy 8 howitzers in a day in just one part of the front it makes you realise that destroying or damaging such a high amount of equipment across a massive front isn't actually unrealistic. The unit in talking about is Magyars birds, they destroy masses of artillery every day it's unreal.
@ivanlagrossemoule2 ай бұрын
It's been said again and again, they don't just take systems out of storage exclusively to compensate for losses. If they're building new formations, they will also take systems out of storage. They might've replaced 400 MLRS losses and equipped new troops with an additional 700 MLRS, for example. However, visual confirmation of artillery losses is particularly difficult because counter-battery fire often doesn't provide any images. It's not like a tank that generally sits right on the frontline where someone will eventually fly a drone. Oryx currently puts Russian MLRS losses at 425 give or take, which is likely to be an underestimation. It still means that Russia has lost a significant amount of systems and will have issues replacing them in the future.
@pogo11402 ай бұрын
@@ivanlagrossemoule New formations require new personnel, we are not seeing that kind of growth there
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
@@ivanlagrossemoule If they can replace the truck - they can replace the system. MLRS systems are actually cheep and quick to replace. Tubes are simple, mechanism is nothing special. You need a truck to mount it. Especially when it comes to the unguided variants - production/ stock/ delivery of ammo is much more important. Also training ppl to use them is not a difficult task. Russians refurbish old only because it is cheaper not because it is much faster or they can't surge new production. For those that use guided missiles - it might be significantly more expensive to build new or to adapt trucks but the trucks that carry the ammo are actually the same type and are made to be replacement beads.
@lacdirk2 ай бұрын
@@MrRatlud Unless you're arguing that Russia is deliberately recycling old systems because it's better for the environment or something, the reality is that it refurbishes old soviet stuff because that's faster. So the rate of depletion of the old soviet stuff is close to the total rate of production, and when the soviet stuff runs out, the production rate will be much lower. To claim otherwise is to say that the Russian government doesn't know even the most basic stuff when it comes to arming its troops, and that it has not learned after years of war and switching to a wartime economy.
@neilwilson57852 ай бұрын
500K! Fantastic how hard work pays off even in niche areas.
@EdReed-r8n2 ай бұрын
"hard work" AKA being a US government shill
@johnwalsh48572 ай бұрын
yah Russian MLRS system more for psychological effect, USA MLRS more for real direct physical effect on the target. wonder which is more effective.
@ibrahimcehajic2 ай бұрын
If you're referring to himars vs russian mlrs,then you should compare himars to iskander,iskander has longer range and higher payload vs himars lower payload and higher number of missiles for similar effect.
@mrjohnsonjohn2 ай бұрын
Iskanders is similar to ATACMS tornado-s similar to gmlrs@@leachimy24
@ibrahimcehajic2 ай бұрын
@@leachimy24 what difference does it make what flight path they take,himars uses guided missiles so does iskander,you're a misguided about the classification.
@65k252 ай бұрын
@@ibrahimcehajic Yes, but when you consider that HIMARS can also fire ATACMS, it is basically the same thing, so iskander should not be compared to HIMARS, as HIMARS can play two roles, while the iskander cannot. Besides, the iskander is not mlrs, so it can't be compared in the first place.
@ibrahimcehajic2 ай бұрын
@@65k25 I think you're confused,russian mlrs are used for saturation attack close to the front lines of enemy soldiers and equipment, no accuracy desired or needed because they move quickly,himars with a range of 300 miles and to achthosw distances requires ballistic trajectory, same as iskander,number of launch tubes is irrelevant,who ever is trying to compare himars to unguided short range mlrs is severely misguided.
@sonorangreenman44722 ай бұрын
thanks, excellent
@DanielWW22 ай бұрын
I feel tracking MLRS systems isn't the best indicator of dwindling Russian stockpiles because of what these systems are and what they represent. Let me explain. Rocket artillery is quite a bit different in terms of production requirements vs. traditional artillery. Traditional artillery requires higher quality steel for the barrel, lots of very precise machining and higher quality ammunition that is made to a higher standard to work reliably and accurately. This effect only gets greater with more advanced and longer range artillery systems. Rocket artillery is far simpler because its in essence a tube and a rough aiming system that fires rockets. The costs are in the ammunition, so the rockets. But these also have different costs. There is far less technological sophistication and far more resource requirement for these. They don't have much in the way of higher quality steel or construction requirements. Its basically a tube with a rocket motor, a simple fuel and explosives with a simple fuse. I suspect Russia is pulling these systems out of storage in such numbers, because they are unable to make enough artillery shells and the required artillery pieces to fire them. That is why they are also buying ammo from North-Korea. Meanwhile they can make simpler rockets and fire them en masse. Neither do I think that Russia is unable to replace such systems. I suspect they are more than capable of replacing such losses, meaning their stockpiles are less relevant. It could also suggest that Russia didn't maintain such large stockpiles of rocket artillery because they know they can easily make more. Better to store more traditional artillery that is more difficult to make. Those will be a lot more difficult to replace. As for the background as to why the Soviets had so much more rocket artillery: For the Soviet economy which was resource rich and both technology and quality poor, rocket systems made a lot of sense. Those where a cheap solution to achieve mass of fire and didn't strain the limited capabilities of Soviet industry. For example during WW2 the Soviets used screw breeches with propellant cases for their 122mm and 152mm artillery, because they could not make sliding block breaches. A lot of these artillery pieces where at least "inspired" by German designs, often designed inside the Soviet-Union in the early 1930s. Designs the Soviets could not produce themselves without technical assistance. Eventually those where put into production, but to a lower standard and with the bizarre combination of a screw breech which is easier but more time consuming to machine and propellant cases which are not required with a properly machined screw breech which is gas tight. Cases are used for sliding block breeches which require more precise machining, but are easier to machine when you can do this. The case is normally needed to create a gas seal. In an attempt to remove cases, the Germans during WW2 already developed a sliding breech block that didn't need these any more because it was machined to form a gas seal when closed. They couldn't field it because the war ended. That development however is now in use in a lot of mainly European 52 calibre 155mm howitzers. I suspect this is why the Soviets invested so much in rocket artillery. Such systems and rockets can be assembled in far lower technology facilities than where you would make artillery ammunition, let alone artillery pieces. That also makes them great for a mobilisation situation where you need more than your established facilities can produce. Its why they became so popular during WW2 with particularly the Germans and Soviets, but eventually all major countries. It was an easy way to add more artillery for little technological investment. Its also why the US arguably had the least investment of the major countries during WW2. They could and made huge qualities of long range artillery and the shells. The Germans made more shells, but they could not make the artillery pieces fast enough. Its also why western countries never went that deeply into rocket artillery post WW2. For western countries the logic was inverted with having the ability to produce higher technological quality systems. The limitation was in resources and willingness to spend to much on military stockpiles. That pushed them towards fewer but more advanced systems. Where western countries adopted longer 39 calibre and later 52 calibre 155mm howitzers, the Soviets kept a mix of 122mm, 152mm and rocket artillery. The average western 39 calibre artillery piece was also superior to the overwhelming majority of Soviet 122mm and 152mm howitzers and far closer to the much rarer 152mm long range guns. The 52 calibre 155mm artillery is superior to anything the Soviets or now Russians have. And Ukraine is getting more and more of those 52 calibre 155mm howitzers. Those however are bottlenecked because they require specialised facilities to create the artillery and ammunition. That is the main issue in supply for the last two years.
@my3bikaht882 ай бұрын
Of course Russia can produce these systems in required quantities. Problem is, it'll take more concessions from population due to redirection of resources.
@rogerk61802 ай бұрын
@@my3bikaht88 if they make more of these, they can make less of something else. It all comes down to priority, production capacity is just limited.
@Jimmy_The_Goat2 ай бұрын
Curious that you took so much time to write all this and completely ignored the part of the video where production data is presented and shown to not be remotely enough to replace losses.
@sebastianhaban13662 ай бұрын
@@Jimmy_The_Goat 1)When I need more eggs I can simply just go to a grocery store and buy more eggs 2)Wenn I still have enough eggs in my fridge for quite some time you'll probably not catch me driving in panic to the grocery store to buy more eggs today, because eggs are so commonly available I can buy them than when I need them. 3)Curious that I took so much time to write all this and completely ignored the part of my shopping list is presented and there are NO eggs listed wich, by your logic, seems to cast doubt on my ability to buy eggs or the availability of eggs...
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
@@Jimmy_The_Goat The thing with especially non guided, shorter range MLRSs is that you don't need to have almost any special production. You can use any truck to mount it on. Russia uses old trucks as they are free, repairing them with parts that are in stock - only labor is required. If they finish the old trucks - they will spend more and mount it on a newer truck. As long as it can carry the weight it is good enough. The bigger variants caring the guided variants are designed to be replaced by the trucks that haul the ammo. So as long as they have some of the trucks in stock - they can rebuild them again. The ammo and ammo production/logistics are much more important factors. Also MLRS have some advantages over standard artillery. You can use one truck to lob the 40 rockets very fast and move away. It simulates the work of several tube arty for the same time by exposing a much cheaper resource. Also you can use bigger variants with different loads - more explosive than standard arty or increased range. You can even load some intelligence equipment in the rocket and use it that way. Modern arty with rocket assisted shells can do some of this - but the cost of the ammo is very very hi and production is slow. Those big soviet rockets are cheep and give you a lot of room for different solutions.
@Jin-Ro2 ай бұрын
What about the factories. Are they making mlrs, tanks, apc's? Any sat footage of their production yards? How many are they churning out a month?
@juneabbey95382 ай бұрын
To make a new tank takes an enormous amount of precision heavy engineering. To make a new artillery tube takes weeks of precision casting and boring. To make a new MLRS .... surely that is a vastly easier and cheaper task than making a tank, a towed 152mm, or even a BMP? Or am I missing something?
@MM229665 күн бұрын
No, and that was always one of the appeals Katushya-style MLRS. But the fact they are cleaning out all the existing ones is a definite metric, and making the AMMO was always as complex or more complex than regular tube-artillery shells.
@armyhobo24712 ай бұрын
I always look forward to your videos. 👍
@Moneo_Artaid2 ай бұрын
Personally I consider the TOS rocket launcher as the worst one the Russians have because they have a very short range , they are very slow , not much accurate and generally very expensive .
@issadraco5322 ай бұрын
maybe you should volunteer on the ukrainian side and get out there and go up against these and then come back to tell us how slow and how terrible and how overpriced they are. also.. inaccurate? it's thermobaric rockets that mix fuel with air to create massive shockwaves and that smoke every living creature within a certain range. what are you talking about with your accuracy? next you're going to say that sniper rounds or laser-guided hellfire missiles or SDBs are terrible because they don't have enough firepower..
@Moneo_Artaid2 ай бұрын
@@issadraco532 I didn't say it's totally useless , just the worst out of them in my personal opinion. The fact that it has short range forces the Russians to bring it closer to the front line which makes it easier for the Ukrainians to spot it and destroy it and the fact that it's slow and expensive makes things worse. Also how is this smoke wave effective when the troop's are hiding in a banker in the City? Unless they hit the building directly or very closely it doesn't have much of an effect. For example Russians have been constantly using TOS for one straight year in Ugledar upon buildings with not much of an effect.
@histrion53902 ай бұрын
You should see the results of that 'not much of effect'.
@Moneo_Artaid2 ай бұрын
@@histrion5390 I have seen a lot of empty fields get evaporated. Not gonna lie the grass didn't have a chance
@65k252 ай бұрын
@@Moneo_Artaid Thermo weapons are a great idea, Russia makes many great thermobaric weapons like RPO-A and Thermo grenades, but I don't know why they made it a short range rocket mounted on a vehicle, no artillery vehicle should be slow and bulky and short range on the modern battlefield.
@planetofthepete2 ай бұрын
TOS is a Thermobaric weapon system - they're not included with the standard artillery ORBAT ... not sure why but they are possibly considered a special use system. .
@UlrichHarms-ci1ov2 ай бұрын
They are a bit different with a quite short range. The overall number of the TOS systems is small and as a relative new system none are expected to be in storrage. There are also Rocket pods for helicopers that essentially work like an MLRS.
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
TOS can do 1 thing - to attack fortified positions. It can't be used like other artillery units for cover fire or to attack advancing enemy or to swap shell types for a specific goal. Just a very specialized tool. I think they wanted to do something with the concept but at some point shifted focus to something that can be used for more tasks.
@thesuncollective14752 ай бұрын
Great work. Thank you, we need some good news right now. So they will be out of MRLS in a year or so? Hang in their UKR you are winning
@nmc052able2 ай бұрын
Thx for a great video!
@unpaintedleadsyndrome2 ай бұрын
Rocket artillery isn't designed to be accurate... Himars: Am I a joke to you?
@orlock202 ай бұрын
HIMARS shoot missiles. Guided rockets are missiles. The same thing is happening with the Hydra rockets that have guided systems installed on them. Those are called guided rockets which would mean they are missiles.
@mangatom1922 ай бұрын
@@orlock20Why do you think the US military calls it a rocket rather than a missile though?
@TheStephaneAdam2 ай бұрын
@@mangatom192 Because the US military has really weird naming conventions?
@l0lzor1232 ай бұрын
@@mangatom192 because they added guidance to the existing mlrs rockets and called the new precision one gmlrs lol, i mean it makes sense its the same rockets but just now with gps guidance
@CEDFTW2 ай бұрын
@@TheStephaneAdamwhat do you mean if everything is an M1 how can that complicate things?
@markmonaghan23092 ай бұрын
Fantastic thanks again
@cmdrstargazer35412 ай бұрын
at least keep some for the museums in future
@stevenniccoli59672 ай бұрын
I love your work! Thanks for a great job 👍
@lordisback19472 ай бұрын
Because Russia has started using dumb bombs with umpk glide kits, 9m542 and 9m544 guided glonass rockets on smerch tornado-s variant, wire guided fpv drones which are jam proof and also krasnopol guided shells for artillery similar to Excalibur and they increased krasnopol production by 25 times this year itself. So, when Russia can produce accurate weapons then why will they make more old weapons rather they're focussing or preparing for something else bigger in future with the production rate of weapons modern weapons including lancet drones
@snaakie2 ай бұрын
Lmao nice cope orc
@MM229665 күн бұрын
You know, when they signed the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe in 1990 to limit armor, artillery, and other conventional forces, they probably didn't realize there was a more sure way to do it.
@toi_techno2 ай бұрын
Vintage junk NATO would subdue Russia in hours
@johnnyenglish5832 ай бұрын
With what? Germany has been trying to deploy one brigade to the Baltics. Sadly, they have no manpower to do it. Britain? With its 130 tanks and a tiny army? Realistically, only France and perhaps Poland are an actual force to be reckoned with on the ground, although Poland's in the process of expanding its army so lots of the soldiers are still fresh. So unless the USA manages to move its troops without them being torped during a war, defending against the ruSSians would still be difficult. Sure, NATO would absolutely wreck the ruSSians in the air and on the sea (except for subs, which would still be a challenge), but both ruSSia and Ukraine have proven you can keep fighting for 2.5 years even after losing most of your modern equipment. This is something people in the West don't appreciate and don't understand: there is no such thing as "manpower losses that will stop the ruSSians from attacking". They lost over 12 million soldiers (and some 27 million people in total) in WW2, yet they kept attacking.
@CraigAshton-d7q2 ай бұрын
Ya but take the air, takes the logistics, they would sue for peace in a heartbeat.
@ewartmouton2 ай бұрын
Or, you know, poof there goes most cities in the Northern hemisphere 🤯
@johnnyenglish5832 ай бұрын
@@CraigAshton-d7q that's what Hitler said in 1941. And Napoleon a while earlier.
@EdReed-r8n2 ай бұрын
How much does this shilling pay?
@maxiweller9745Ай бұрын
Why are there comparatively so many BM 27 left in storage? Do they tend to haver lower rates of attrition/destruction or are they usually in a worse shape in these storage bases? Thanks a lot for the Videos
@a564-c3q2 ай бұрын
Ru authorities, media, talking heads and mouthpieces commonly do a lot of projecting. One of those "expert" "guests" who is a regular on this most important talk show where Solovyov is the host recently said Ukr has resources left for another year, then they would run out. If this was projection again and the guy knows what he's talking about, then things will get pretty rough in Ru in a year or so...
@iQKyyR3K2 ай бұрын
Gotta love Solovyov calling for a war with Germany because we stopped exporting Mercedes replacement parts for his car 🤣 He loves Russia so much he doesn't drive a Russian car.
@rogerk61802 ай бұрын
We have hit the high point of the russian effort. Things will only weaken from here forward.
@Lukas41822 ай бұрын
I assume the launch platform itself is comparatively cheap and not hard to build, right? I wonder about the production cost (especially compared to normal shells) and storage state of the rockets themselves.
@LordDaret2 ай бұрын
3:24 you forgot to mention about how long it takes to reload these. You need to manually reload all 40 rockets, one at a time. This makes their fire rate abysmal.
@huskytail2 ай бұрын
Your video and the Russian version of Radio Free Europe got into my recommendations at the exact same time, one under the other 🙂. Good job in both counting and reaching people.
@wattihrvolt-pn3pf2 ай бұрын
For rocket artillery i would expect the launcher to be much less of a factor than the ammunition.
@heyhoe1682 ай бұрын
This is because you are sane and smart. Majority of ppl came here to fangirl for one team or another.
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
Probably the truck is the hardest to replace - but as I know Soviet equipment, probably you can use any truck as long as it can carry the load. But let them count - it seems they have fun.
@dimirossman8702 ай бұрын
Keep up the excellent good work
@thomas_jay2 ай бұрын
Where do all the tanks, IFVs, artillery pieces and MLRS systems go after they were taken from storage? I mean for maintance / refurbishment and afterwards?
@rogerk61802 ай бұрын
Front line replacements and generating new combat units.
@thomas_jay2 ай бұрын
@@rogerk6180 Maybe. Also ... where are the refurbishment sites?
@adubs30802 ай бұрын
@@thomas_jaytank factories seem to be the main places for restoration
@rogerk61802 ай бұрын
@@thomas_jay they seem to be very decentralised and relativly small scale operations.
@thomas_jay2 ай бұрын
@@adubs3080 Any satellite pictures from the storage areas around those factories?
@markusseitz83762 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@LSOP-2 ай бұрын
Which Russian vehicle will be the first to hit zero?
@patwilson25462 ай бұрын
None. They keep making them. Zero is not the point. Not enough is.
@d4nth3m4n82 ай бұрын
Ropucha class ships... aircraft carriers!.. lol, i bet i can think of more, i haven't even reached land yet...
@kirgan10002 ай бұрын
They will never hit zero, if they start running out of something, like tanks, artillery etc, they will slow down the tempo, to reduce losses and preserve the remaining vehicles.
@sjonnieplayfull58592 ай бұрын
@@patwilson2546 just merely from a statistics viewpoint, some will reach zero because they no longer produce T-55, T-62, T-64 tanks as well as several aircraft types in use are no longer being produced either from a military viewpoint, not enough is good enough, like you said, so I'm not trying to contradict your statement, rather add to it
@Deimnos2 ай бұрын
the venerable MT-LB, already hit 0 in storage bases, though there still are some kicking around with frontline units.
@vitostan31342 ай бұрын
Love your videos.
@tjpld2 ай бұрын
BM-27 Uragan. More like BM-27 U are gone.
@geofftomlinson2 ай бұрын
Just an excellent analysis
@TheArklyte2 ай бұрын
That's... weird? 1)Russia and USSR view MLRS as one of the niches to be proud of. So they'd be more cautious with it and prioritise it's production more; 2)MLRS(unguided) is easier to produce then full blown SPGs as far as I know so again, higher priority in production to get more firepower; 3)I don't recall mass usage of MLRS breaking news and neither their mass losses. If anything, it's the equipment you'd expect to see more of, unlike critically important, but slow to replace IFVs.
@MrRatlud2 ай бұрын
IFVs - especial the soviet build are not that hard to replace. You have some damaged - you repair up to 70% just for 2-3 weeks close to the front lines. They use standard parts that can be stripped from those that are written off. For Ukraine that uses many IFV- types this can me more of an issue if delivery of spare parts is not done in time. Russians have IFVs with army groups that are not part of the war - so if they need some fast, they can just take them from the army inside Russia. Also increasing the production of IFVs can be done much much faster that the production of Artillery or tanks. They use much less steel and don't need some of the more fancy equipment like big guns. The smaller something is - usually it is much faster easier cheaper to produce. And don't put too much on the sentimental value of one type of equipment or another for either Russia or Ukraine. Those are tools, if they work well, they will try to have more, if they don't - well, they will stay in history. People in eastern Europe are less sentimental and more practical. Perception of something - as media call it, was rarely a real factor here.
@N4CR2 ай бұрын
Ah someone with a brain. These channels also never show you the footage pre-war of outgoing factory areas filled with new production missiles for years in various videos, they were stockpiling it well, well before this war, almost like it was... expected! This channel copes so hard it's hilarious.
@Ivan_Powrosnik2 ай бұрын
@@N4CR you do realise that said factory images, were explicitly staged promotional ones? Russia is the same nation that 50 years ago drove their mobile ICBM launchers around the block in their annual victory parade so they could paint bigger numbers on them and make it seem like they had more. Russia is a country that bases itself on deceit, generally their sources have been proven wrong hundreds of times. This is the next best thing we can do, which while imperfect, is still a tad more reliable than russias claims of having destroyed over a hundred Abrahams using fifty thousand newly built T-14s, that nobody can apparently find because of how stealthy they are. It’s a joke of country that masquerades as a superpower, and while these numbers may be incorrect, they’re the best thing we’ll get until independent, impartial studies are done after the war to determine the true losses.
@highjumpstudios23842 ай бұрын
I don't think it's super weird, MLRS wouldn't be making headlines because it's one of those boring assets you just use as opposed to making a stink about like Terminator or Armata. It's the sort of system that would have its numbers get chipped away at over the course of 2 years of a wasteful war as opposed to being lost in vast swathes, just like we'd expect it to.
@ShimmeringSword2 ай бұрын
@@N4CR no where in the video did he say they're running out of rockets. If they're making so many new launch vehicles, then why are they rapidly emptying all of their reserves? At best, this means they're still losing a lot of vehicles one way or another. This is an attrition war and this channel simply shows the extremely high price Russia is paying to invade a country. Live proof that Russia is done for as a world power, no NATO country will ever fear them again.
@andersjjensen2 ай бұрын
The TOS-1 and TOS-1A are not flame throwers, despite their Russian name. They are short range MLRS with thermobaric warheads. That is, just before impact the warhead disperses fuel (probably just regular diesel) as a fine mist in the air and ignites it. If done correctly you get a massive shock wave that can knock over buildings, deplete oxygen and give everyone hidden in a fox hole a disabling concussion. If done incorrectly you just set things on fire. From the Ukrainian reporting these fall somewhere in the middle. As in, they do generate a decent amount of shock wave but dispersal isn't too good so there's also a decent amount of burning.
@Syndr12 ай бұрын
To be fair, tanks get all the Glory.
@skvUSA2 ай бұрын
The very interesting point "it was replaced with towed artillery" !!!!! That would imply that storage facilities can be repurposed and artillery estimates from several month ago may be fall short from actual numbers.
@jakubszymanski16232 ай бұрын
It's another episode of "russia is running out of x"! Next week, russia runs out of small arms ammo.
@captaindak51192 ай бұрын
Yep, some viewers seem to still eat this bs up though.
@highjumpstudios23842 ай бұрын
That would be really funny, but no. Running out of Small arms ammo is ridiculous. Stop being silly this is a serious discussion.
@cemreomerayna4632 ай бұрын
@@highjumpstudios2384 There is no good faith argument you can have with them, they will continue to deny the satellite imagery and visual loss data. It just doesn't fit their narrative. Being silly is the only way to cope with the facts on the ground.
@sebastiaanl98762 ай бұрын
If they had so many ammo, why they are stil fighting against Ukraine and not already won by now? Jezus russia is 20 times bigger total failure
@simonbowden84082 ай бұрын
What's interesting is that presumably the Russians valued MLRS highly, otherwise why use them so heavily? So the fact that the Ivans are nearly out of them is significant. I'm guessing though that the tech behind these things are pretty low? Aren't they just trucks with tubes on top?
@mothrahlurker7882 ай бұрын
Yes, but that is basically the advantage of these systems. You can modernize the ammunition instead of having to modernize the system firing the ammunition. This makes them more expensive to operate than tubed artillery but also means that upgrades aren't as necessary.
@unconnected2 ай бұрын
For anyone coming, you can skip straight to 4:28 to get to the actual information teased at in the video title. Assuming if you clicked on this video you don't need the most basic explanation of what an MLRS is or a sponsored plug to GROUND news
@nils15432 ай бұрын
Thank you for yet another great video! Where do you source your open source satellite images?
@faisal-ca2 ай бұрын
Unless Russia can ramp up production of new units, we are looking at a year at most at this rate. They might be able to source them from any 3rd party market. I am assuming there are plenty of them sitting around in the world. Not to mention the spare parts market that might help refurbish damaged units.
@josephmontanaro23502 ай бұрын
I makes sense that these would be fairly fast to mobilize, getting a tank up and running even if your not modernizing them takes way longer, basicly you have 3 things to work on to get these up and running 1, getting the vehicle itself running, 2, makeing sure the the tubes are safe for use and the traversal mechanisms work fine and 3, this depends on the model but reinstalling the FCU/ballistic computer. Hell in theory not every one needs this, it's more jank but if you have at least 1 or more working fire control systems in the battery your more or less good to go, you would assume indirect fire would require more fine tuning but compared to point target fire especialy with MLRS your more focused on "did i saturate the grid" then "is the sight on my tank calibrated so I can put a DU/tungsten dart into that other moving tank while I'm moveing" it might seem more complex on paper but in the grand scheme as much as people talk about smart shells and guided munitions in most conventional wars aside from very high priority or special targets why screw around with a laser guided missle when you can just dump a whole rack of 122 or larger shit on target, especialy when you factor in some of the more exotic munitions such as thermoberic/incendiary and cluster munitions, I'd argue their MLRSes are taking massive losses but again these are just what we see in storage. Some might be in the field. Some might be getting fixed at a depot and in addition née production from the factory is also another factor, they are loosing their massive stockpile and depleting it but just because the reserve depot is running low dosnt mean they have none working, also the tube less ones your seeing might be a case where they are taking the rack for another truck because that truck needs work or that the truck itself is good to go but it's tubes are clapped out and it's waiting for a new rack
@norad64372 ай бұрын
Seen your videos seem like broken record playing same song over and over again, its almost 3 years now and for 2 years russia is out of weapons that's what i hear every time, this is getting really old.
@achimrecktenwald96712 ай бұрын
Wasn't there a fire in a / the manufacturing site for these rocket throwers near Mongolia a couple months or so ago? It was not clear if it was a drone or sabotage or an accident. Saw it in a KZbin video at the time.
@lexiusugrymius93922 ай бұрын
Summery of video - "Orcs have shov.. missles for a week".