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Ukraine uses soil robots to help its soldiers because it lacks workers against Russia.
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They are used in a number of species, from the collection of injured soldiers to the shot in Russia, but have some defects.
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One operator said that he was most promising: as a bomb that can drive to Russia.
Place mines, carry the load and transport corpses: These are all paths of Ukraine soldiers who use ground robots in their fight against Russia.
Oleksandr YabChanka, the head of the robot system for the Da Vinci Wolves -Battalon of Ukraine, said Business Insider that these robots were used. In addition to the above, they are also used to transport injured soldiers, to dismiss them to De-Mine, to shoot in Russian positions, such as exploding a bomb near Russian goals and collecting secret services.
He said one of these uses was the “most promising” for the forces of Ukraine: their use as a bomb.
This is because the robots can be stacked with far more explosives than a sky drone can carry and can get closer than any person can safely.
“A decisive difference between unmanned systems in the air and the unmanned systems on site is the mass that you can wear,” said Yabchanka. This is the key because Ukraine “always has to be a step, half a step before the enemy in relation to the powers of destruction”.
He said the greatest Air drone Can wear mines with a weight of 22 pounds each, while the smallest floor robots with which he works can wear more than £ 48, and on average much more than wearing.
The drones can also bring themselves much closer to the Russian positions before they explode than every soldier can safely. Some videos from the battlefields show that the robots drive in Russian trenches and undermine before they explode.
This video, which was recorded by YabChanka’s unity, shows how the robots can get into Russian positions:
YabChanka said that his unit was carried in a Russian basement for a few hours before he spoke to Business Insider in March with Business Insider.
It exploded in the actual basement, “not on the next street, not nearby”, and killed the Russian infantry. Business Insider could not check this claim independently.
Error in the system
Robot technology is developing and improves, but Yabchanka said it was still faulty.
The robots can collect intelligence through their cameras, but not as effective as drones in the sky. Even simple obstacles such as grass can restrict this function, said Yabchanka.
Another problem is that you lose communication and then “only an expensive bunch of metal scrap”, said Yabchanka. Many companies use AI and other technologies to move the robots into them without operators, but it is a constant development race.
By collecting injured soldiers, for example, the robots can get soldiers and at the same time risk fewer other troops. But YabChanka said it is only used as the last way out, because when the platform is separated, it leaves the soldiers in need of protection outdoors and far away from comrades that are visible to Russia’s drones.
Evacuation robot (unmanned floor vehicle) Themis on a dusty road during the field tests in Kyiv, Ukraine.Mykhaylo Palinchak/SOPA Pictures/Light dryet via Getty Images
Create mines and transport ammunition
The robots are armed with rifles and other weapons so that they can fire in Russian positions while keeping Ukrainian soldiers away from the rear fire. YabChanka described this function as “most complex in terms of implementation”, but one that enables its unit to do things that cannot be done “even by the bravest infantry”.
The robots can lay mines that Yabchanka said is “quite dangerous” for soldiers because “they have a herd of drought enemies who all float about them”. The robots can also wear more mines than soldiers.
In addition to mines, the robots can carry the cargo that soldiers need, from food and water to ammunition. YabChanka said that an average large size of a robotization system can wear more than what can normally wear 10 soldiers.
And in contrast to air dries, robots can be all about.
The robots can precede soldiers to determine whether the route is clear. You will suffer damage if you hit a mine that is preferable to a person who is injured or killed.
YabChanka said his unit started using robots to collect the corpses of fallen soldiers. Usually it takes about eight soldiers and it risks their life. It is not a perfect solution, said YabChanka: The robot can be separated or hit by a mine, which means that soldiers still have to help.
Milrem Robotics’ Themis during the tests in France in 2018.Christophe Morin/IP3/Getty Images
The technology continues to develop in real time
The technology is still developing, and both companies and soldiers find new ways to develop and use them.
YabChanka said his unit sometimes speaks to the manufacturers about video calls from trenches.
A floor robot company said that Ukrainian soldiers even found ways to use its robots that she hadn’t expected.
The use of soil robots in the war is not entirely new, and Western companies have used versions of them in recent conflicts. But what strikes in Ukraine is the extent of its use and the quick innovation in its use.
It is something that the West observes, with companies and military people who upgrade their technology in response. But Russia does the same.
YabChanka said when it comes to one of the new uses that the Ukraine and its allies find for the robots is not the question of whether Russia will do the same.
“So the question is who makes it faster?” he said.
“We have to scale all of these things faster than the Russians,” he said, and asked European industry to work closely with Ukrainian troops and industry in order to innovate quickly.
Read the original article about Business Insider