Hmm, are the Russians also having problems in that department? This is a Ukrainian tank per the title.
That said, it’s a reasonable general take. Every time there’s a new weapon this debate plays out. Sometimes it’s the atom bomb and lives up to the hype, but sometimes it’s the interwar bomber that doesn’t always get through.
Russian artillery is magnificently imprecise. In order to hit a specific target using Soviet-style artillery, you need about 10 times as many rounds as with western artillery.
When the goal is to obliterate a town, that doesn’t matter. But when you’re trying to hit a single tank, it does.
It’s more doctrine than actual machine accuracy. They plan to hit a large area as their primary technique of inflicting damage, while a NATO force waits for some kind of known target or goal (like “make this route unusable”).
It’s a doctrine dictated by machine accuracy.
There was a lot of text about the accuracy of Soviet-style artillery back in 2022 when Ukraine migrated to the western 155 mm ammunition and, at the same time, to western-made artillery.
Interesting, I’m going to have to look into that. Soviet designs usually do have larger allowances, but the fundamental way the technology works is of course the same.
Yes, Russia has had to heavily rely on North Korean artillery ammunition supply and that reserve stock has run out. It was poor quality to begin with as well.
The real problem for Russia though is they can’t protect their artillery from being hunted down by Ukraine so they can’t deploy it in as forward threatening positions on assault and thus for Ukraine fiber optic drones, glidebombs and mines are far more of a realistic threat to armor.
Hmm, are the Russians also having problems in that department? This is a Ukrainian tank per the title.
That said, it’s a reasonable general take. Every time there’s a new weapon this debate plays out. Sometimes it’s the atom bomb and lives up to the hype, but sometimes it’s the interwar bomber that doesn’t always get through.
@CanadaPlus @supersquirrel
Russian artillery is magnificently imprecise. In order to hit a specific target using Soviet-style artillery, you need about 10 times as many rounds as with western artillery.
When the goal is to obliterate a town, that doesn’t matter. But when you’re trying to hit a single tank, it does.
It’s more doctrine than actual machine accuracy. They plan to hit a large area as their primary technique of inflicting damage, while a NATO force waits for some kind of known target or goal (like “make this route unusable”).
@CanadaPlus
It’s a doctrine dictated by machine accuracy.
There was a lot of text about the accuracy of Soviet-style artillery back in 2022 when Ukraine migrated to the western 155 mm ammunition and, at the same time, to western-made artillery.
Interesting, I’m going to have to look into that. Soviet designs usually do have larger allowances, but the fundamental way the technology works is of course the same.
Yes, Russia has had to heavily rely on North Korean artillery ammunition supply and that reserve stock has run out. It was poor quality to begin with as well.
The real problem for Russia though is they can’t protect their artillery from being hunted down by Ukraine so they can’t deploy it in as forward threatening positions on assault and thus for Ukraine fiber optic drones, glidebombs and mines are far more of a realistic threat to armor.