incredible. after the entire drone innovation weapons race, nets turn out to be most effective.
looking forward to seeing nuclear aircraft carriers equipped with circus-tent sized misquote nets.
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incredible. after the entire drone innovation weapons race, nets turn out to be most effective.
looking forward to seeing nuclear aircraft carriers equipped with circus-tent sized misquote nets.
incredible. after the entire drone innovation weapons race, nets turn out to be most effective.
Simple barbed wire was so effective in WWI that it sparked the invention of the tank.
Where are the times when everybody laughed at Russians for doing that. I wonder how effective are really those nets - seen (Russian) drones dropping napalm (or something similar) on them.
That was mainly when Russian equipment was getting mesh fitted directly to its outside instead of cheap netting being placed over roads. If you fit an anti-drone cage to something, it only moves the explosion about a foot further away, which often isn't enough to make a meaningful difference to survivability. If you make the cage bigger, your vehicle stops fitting though gaps, so that's not practical. Covering a road can keep the explosion metres away, though, and protects everything using the road rather than just the one vehicle.
Not really, I vividly remember laughing at both concepts - vehicles and roads. Only to copy both later. And I think you're wrong about cages not helping much - they do, armor piercing munition is ineffective when it explodes before touching armor. But the concern is with nets covering roads as they are fire prone. I guess they help plenty otherwise.
Armour piercing shaped charges are more sensitive to the direction they hit at than to the distance, so they're unsuitable for use on drones because you're rarely, if ever, going to line them up just right, and armour piercing squash head munitions need to be going fast enough that they squash against the armour they're trying to pierce before detonation, so need to be carried by something much faster than a drone. Suicide drones just have a lump of explosive as heavy as they can carry, and being 30cm further away from a simple explosion rarely stops it ruining your day.
AFAIK they have them on drones for a while now (one of the articles). But I guess even with normal explosives, it helps putting explosions as far away as possible. I mean, they are certainly not caging armored vehicles for noting.
You've linked an article about a tank with an anti-drone cage being defeated, so even if it does point out that there are situations where a shaped charge can be made to work on a drone, it doesn't support the original claim that shaped charges can be protected against by a small anti-drone cage.
I usually do not open certain nazi social network, so I didn't see. However, what is that over the top of the tanks is not visible enough - perhaps it's only against top down attacks (such as Javelins usually do) or poorly built.