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רוסלאנד'ס עקספערימענטאלע שוץ-מיטלען קעגן די FPV דראונס.

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Main image for רוסלאנד'ס עקספערימענטאלע שוץ-מיטלען קעגן די FPV דראונס.

Russia has tested an experimental unmanned ground vehicle equipped with a novel form of protection designed to counter first-person-view attack drones, highlighting the evolving technological improvisation driven by the war in Ukraine. Footage circulating from a snowy training area shows the tracked ground drone fitted with rotating steel cables intended to physically disrupt incoming FPV drones before impact.

The concept behind the system is straightforward: as the cables spin around the vehicle, they create a moving barrier capable of striking and damaging the lightweight propellers used by FPV drones, causing them to lose control or crash before reaching their target. Unlike electronic warfare or jamming systems, the mechanism relies entirely on mechanical contact, making it immune to countermeasures such as hardened electronics or autonomous guidance.

Remote operators can be seen controlling the vehicle during testing, suggesting the platform is still in an early experimental phase rather than active deployment. The design echoes earlier, largely theoretical proposals within Russian military circles to mount similar rotating “fans” or cable systems on conventional vehicles, including utility vans and light transports, though those ideas never progressed beyond concept stages.

The emergence of this prototype reflects the intense pressure placed on armored and support vehicles by Ukrainian FPV drones, which have destroyed or disabled thousands of vehicles since 2022. As a result, both sides of the conflict have increasingly turned to low-cost, rapidly deployable countermeasures ranging from improvised cages and netting to electronic jammers and decoys.

While it remains unclear whether the rotating cable system is effective or practical under combat conditions, its appearance underscores a broader trend in modern warfare: adaptation through experimentation. As FPV drones continue to dominate the battlefield, militaries are racing to find affordable solutions that can be produced quickly and integrated onto existing platforms, even if those solutions appear unconventional.
 

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