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#1
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09-22-2025, 04:01 AM
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Russian Invasion Ukraine. Day: 1306-1315 (Sept 21 - Sept 30)
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#2
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09-22-2025, 04:04 AM
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Re: Russian Invasion Ukraine. Day: 1306-1315 (Sept 21 - Sept 30)
1. Civilian woman, that was fleeing together with Ukrainian soldiers, killed by russian kamikaze drones. 2. Enemy soldier that wanted to commit suicide by grenade had second thoughts and backed out but an Ukrainian drone granted his wish. 3. Collecting enemy trophy patch. 4. 425th Separate Assault Regiment Skelya killing 7 enemy soldiers in drone attacks. 5. The Fatum unit of the 60th Mechanized Brigade destroying enemy infantry. 6. 13th Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine hits an enemy ammo depot. 7. Enemy soldier shoots himself in the head lying on the ground. 8. Enemy soldier bleeding from the head before his head explodes. 9. Enemy soldier decides to slit his own throat with a knife. 10. Two russian Lancets taken down by Ukrainian drones in the Siverskyi front direction. 11. Three enemy Mi-8 helicopters and an expensive Nebo-U radar station were hit in occupied Crimea. 12. The Akhmat special forces decided to go a little closer to the frontline for a video report on their TikTok accounts, where they finally met with Ukrainian defenders. 13. The 40th Separate Coastal Defense Brigade successfully uses FPV drones with artificial intelligence, which helps to identify and strike the targets. 14. Hunting for the enemy. 15. Destruction of enemy equipment on the Kostiantynivka direction. The defenders spotted a tank and 2 BMPs of the occupiers advancing to assault the defenders' positions near Yablunivka. The enemy attack was neutralized by FPV drones and other firepower of the 12th Azov Brigade and adjacent units. The tank and BMPs were destroyed, and another combat vehicle was damaged. The enemy personnel were eliminated. |
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#3
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09-22-2025, 05:24 AM
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Re: Russian Invasion Ukraine. Day: 1306-1315 (Sept 21 - Sept 30)
1. An enemy soldier tries to crawl away from a drone and destruction of a BMP-1 (BMP-1P) with a mangal and presumably BMP-2 with a mangal in the Kramatorsk district of Donetsk region. 2. Pig feeding on an enemy soldiers' corpse. 3. Enemy soldier tries to hide for the drone but it all ends in an explosion. 4. Lonely soldier tries to hide for the drone but dies after his ass got blown off by a drone. 5. Enemy drones and their operators hide-out destroyed. 6. Several enemy soldiers targetted and destroyed by drones, one even ends up in pieces upon a tree. 7. Multiple enemy soldiers destroyed by drone attacks compilation. 8. Drone lands right next to enemy soldier hiding on the ground. 9. Numerous enemy infantry men destroyed when they ride bikes, sidecars or quads. 10. Aftermath. 11. 5 occupiers and one motorcyclist were destroyed in the Novopavlivka direction. 12. The 30th OMBR destroying occupiers using the ReDrone program. 13. Strike on the logistics hub of the 810th Marine Brigade. In cooperation with the SOU strike units, they identified and hit ammo depots, material resources, and living quarters of the personnel of the 810th in the Kursk region. 14. Can't hide for the drones. 15. Predator Brigade drones hunting enemy and their equipment. |
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#8
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09-24-2025, 01:04 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,671 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 4596 Post(s)
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Re: Russian Invasion Ukraine. Day: 1306-1315 (Sept 21 - Sept 30)
Where did they find all the "Charlie Brown" Christmas trees?!?!?! I thought all exports to Russia were banned now! |
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#10
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09-25-2025, 09:59 AM
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Re: Russian Invasion Ukraine. Day: 1306-1315 (Sept 21 - Sept 30)
The Russian Molniya-2 was equipped with various types of ammunition, including an unusual arrangement of four “PG-7 charges.” As previously reported, the Molniya series are low-cost, fixed-wing loitering munitions developed and reportedly fielded in large numbers by Russian units. They are reportedly purposefully simple in construction—lightweight airframes, often using basic materials and hobby/industrial electric propulsion—so they can be mass-produced and deployed in swarm or attrition roles rather than as precision, high-end systems. Open sources that have reportedly measured or observed Molniya units suggest combat ranges on the order of tens of kilometers rather than hundreds. A frequent estimate for the original Russian Molniya is reportedly ≥30–35 km operational range, with a payload capacity in the ~5–7 kg class (some modified examples are reportedly equipped with warheads up to ~10 kg in specific builds). These figures reportedly vary with motor, battery, flight profile, and whether the airframe carries extra gear like a fiber spool or an FPV quad. Instead of a single factory warhead, operators have reportedly fitted Molniyas with improvised charges such as anti-tank TM-62 mines, cumulative charges, or enlarged explosive loads. Some reports indicate units have tested heavier explosive arrangements to increase lethality. These changes reportedly trade range and endurance for destructive power. Molniya-2 airframes have reportedly been used as motherships carrying and releasing smaller FPV quadcopters (attack FPVs) behind front lines. In some builds, the Molniya reportedly carries the FPV on a mount or in a simple release fixture; the larger Molniya ferries the FPV close to the target area, then the FPV separates and conducts a short-range, high-speed attack. This concept reportedly increases reach and forces defenders to contend with both the carrier and the smaller, faster attacker. Recent open reports reportedly document examples of Molniya equipped with fiber optic coils, and in some cases, the use of thermobaric or heavier shaped charges is claimed.
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