War

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Exclusive: Ukrainian pilots get virtual jump on F-16 training
Ukrainian pilots are honing their skills in virtual F-16 fighter jet cockpits as they anxiously await approval to travel abroad for training.

A Ukrainian pilot gave a demonstration to a reporter from The Hill in an exclusive visit to a secret facility this month, where the cockpit simulation was displayed on large computer monitors for a small audience.

Andrii, a Su-27 fighter pilot who goes by the call sign ‘Sabre,’ sat in a mock jet seat with a joystick, pedals under his feet, and a throttle to the left. The action takes place in a virtual reality headset.

The ground location, while pixelated, is Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory, and Andrii must identify his target, discharge his bomb and execute an “anti-missile maneuver.”

“And you will see that it explodes,” he explains, as a small fire burns on the computer screen. “This is the fulfillment of the mission, precisely how it is supposed to be in reality.”

Andrii keeps his hands on the controls while leaning his body and swiveling his head in the same movements he would undertake in the Soviet-era Su-27 he typically flies. On the side of his left arm is a patch for “The Ghosts of Kyiv,” the 40th tactical aviation brigade of the air force that draws its name from the debunked myth of a single fighter pilot hailed for taking down multiple Russian planes.

“We are studying F-16s. We are not interested in other aircraft,” he said, echoing a message that Ukraine’s civilian and military leaders have reiterated for months in meetings with Western partners.

After hours in the simulator, Andrii said that when he does sit in the jet, his focus can be on flying because he will know, precisely, how to manage the controls.

“We need to learn and understand the function of every button or switch, and where it is located. That will allow us later to fulfill certain missions quicker. So, we need to learn how to use and maintain this aircraft competently,” he said.

The simulator program training pilots on F-16s has not been previously reported. After a visit by The Hill, the Ukrainian air force released a promotional video on the program featuring Andrii and Oleksii Diakiv, head of the training command for the air force of Ukraine.

“All of us understand that the future belongs to F-16 aircraft or the other aircraft which our partners will provide us with,” Andrii says in the video, sitting in the cockpit of his fighter jet. “That’s why we need to train now, learn the cockpit equipment, armament system and its employment.”

The genesis of the simulator training program was part of a push to get American A-10 Thunderbolt attack aircraft to Ukraine — but that effort was eventually shelved.

The simulators are provided by the nonprofit Heroes and Allies, which had set up the virtual training program for A-10s more than a year earlier. They began purchasing computer software and controls for the F-16 program beginning in August of last year.

“We still have hope that Ukraine will receive the A-10 Thunderbolt II, after the F-16 is provided to Ukraine and its use is fully deployed,” said Alexander Gorgan, co-founder of Heroes and Allies.

President Biden agreed in June to allow the transfer of American-made F-16s from allied countries to Ukraine, and he announced in August that the U.S. would start training some Ukrainian pilots and support personnel at a base in Arizona as soon as October.

But delivery of the aircraft and their operations are not expected to take place until 2024 at the earliest.

Diakiv told The Hill that the simulator program is expected to reduce the overall length of the training for pilots, but it’s a protocol that’s never been tried before.

“We are taking this road for the first time now. So at this moment, I cannot say how much we will be able to reduce the length of training, owing to that approach,” he explained through a translator.

“But we are sure that this will reduce the time needed for that training. But once we have that experience, we certainly will be able to share it.”

The simulator also allows pilots the space to practice missions on the ground without wasting expensive fuel or risking a deadly training accident.

Two weeks before The Hill’s visit with Andrii, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced that a training accident killed three pilots, among them Andriy “Juice” Pilshchykov, a national hero who had taken on an informal role of a spokesperson for Ukraine’s F-16s push.

Juice spoke to The Hill in August 2022, crediting American-provided anti-radar missiles as key in suppressing Russian air defenses, and spoke of the bond he built with U.S. pilots in 2018 after a training accident killed an American and Ukrainian pilot.

“U.S. Air Force became the real brothers in arms for us, with blood on our soil,” he told The Hill at the time.

Russia claims that it has downed more than 450 Ukrainian airplanes, a number that draws a hearty laugh from members of Ukraine’s air force, who say the actual figure is far smaller.

“So perhaps then we’ve got some blue-collar guys who sit underground and make a big number of airplanes every month,” Diakiv said to laughs in the group. “Tiny little dwarfs or elves or hobbits who can fix anything.”

While Ukraine does not comment on its war losses, a senior U.S. official reportedly said in March that Kyiv has lost about 60 aircraft and downed about 70 Russian aircraft.

It’s unclear how many F-16s Ukraine is expected to receive. Denmark has committed to send 19. The Netherlands has a fleet of 42 F-16s but has not yet said how many it will send.

And even as the F-16s are hotly anticipated, the planes are not expected to be a game-changer on the battlefield.

Ukrainian and U.S. officials, as well as experts, say no weapons system on its own will bring Russia to the negotiating table, but rather that consistent commitments from the U.S. and other allies could eventually wear down the support surrounding Russian President Vladimir Putin in maintaining his war.

“I think you’re always in a good place if you talk about capability requirements. Instead of talking about specific platforms or specific numbers, what is the capability that Ukraine needs?” asked Ben Hodges, former commanding general of the United States Army Europe.

“And of course the capability they need for this counteroffensive is to help isolate Crimea and make it untenable for Russian forces, whether that’s with jets, drones, ATACMs [long-range missiles] or whatever, that’s the decisive part of this war, is Crimea,” Hodges said.

But key to Ukraine’s defense is giving the country the ability to close its skies.

Expanding air defense over larger parts of the country — where Russia continues to hit civilian infrastructure including homes and energy and water systems — is viewed as critical for Ukraine to function as a country, keeping its citizens at home and working, and ensuring the safety of international investments and commerce.

Blending a new fleet of F-16 fighter pilots with Western air defense systems is viewed as key to this strategy.

“Perhaps it is less important how many units of the weapons they provide for us, but how well we will be able to use the advantages provided by one or another system. Perhaps we need to combine them in the most rational way to accomplish closing our sky,” Diakiv said.
People have them in their basements and even DIY them...



 

printer

Well-Known Member
Anti aircraft batteries/GLS bombs/F-16's/frankensams.


Russia getting 300km missiles from Iran. On Oct 18 the UN sanctions on Iran exporting military gear expires.

 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Ukraine makes 'breakthroughs', here’s how they gain edge over Putin's Russia

12,009 views Sep 28, 2023 #russia #ukraine #robotyne
UKRAINE claims to have made a breakthrough in the southern Zaporizhia region, while forces also continue to hold ground in Bakhmut.

Former US Army Officer, and Chair of Urban War Studies at West Point, John Spencer, talks to The Sun about the impact of this alleged breakthrough.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

  • Tanks and troops out in the open can now be spotted in five minutes, a Ukrainian official said.
  • Vadym Skibitsky told The Wall Street Journal that they can be hit in a further three minutes.
  • "The survivability on the move is no more than 10 minutes," he said.
The sheer number of drones operating in Ukraine, as well as battle-management systems that provide real-time imaging and locations, mean that troops and tanks out in the open have just minutes before they are targeted, a top Ukrainian military official told The Wall Street Journal.

"Today, a column of tanks or a column of advancing troops can be discovered in three to five minutes and hit in another three minutes," Maj. Gen. Vadym Skibitsky, the deputy commander of Ukraine's HUR military intelligence service, said.

"The survivability on the move is no more than 10 minutes," he added.

Skibitsky also told the newspaper that "surprises have become very difficult to achieve."

Russia and Ukraine are both deploying thousands of drones on the battlefield, and are using cheap drones to target each other's forces.

This in turn is bringing into question some fundamentals of American military doctrine.

"The days of massed armored assaults, taking many kilometers of ground at a time, like we did in 2003 in Iraq — that stuff is gone because the drones have become so effective now," retired US Army sergeant Bradley Crawford, an Iraq war veteran, told the newspaper.

Ukraine has been increasingly relying on cheap, first-person-view drones, or FPVs, to take out Russian military hardware.

These drones tend to cost around $400 to $500, which is a lot less than a regular 155mm artillery shell, which can cost up to $3,000, or a T-72 tank, which costs about $1,2 million.

Last week, unmanned Ukrainian aerial vehicles struck a record 205 pieces of Russian military hardware in Ukraine, Ukraine's Minister of Digital Transformation, Mykhailo Fedorov, said.

These included 64 cannons, 27 tanks, and 55 trucks, he said.

While the exact number of drones deployed remains unclear, the Royal United Services Institute estimated earlier this year that Ukraine was losing about 10,000 drones per month, a sign of their widespread use.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
nice stuff, wish they had these back when i was playing with flight simulators back in the 90's. And they actually had one for the warthog, f15's, f16's and the apache's....boy those were the days
Used to like flight Sims too, my favorite games were ww2 air combat, f117 was good too. I kinda wish they would bring some back and port them to a modern OS. There are not just these sims, they are hooked up to DCS and other air combat simulator networks, there are air wars involving thousands every night! Many are veteran military pilots and there are fanatics with complete simulator builds... There are a lot of youtube videos on how to build your own cockpit etc.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I'll bet the Russian admiral Moscow has been showing off was saved by being late to the meeting, he can do that, he's in charge and while his senior staff and other commanders were waiting for him to show up...
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Ukraine expands its 'Army of drones' | DW News

34,683 views Sep 27, 2023 #Ukraine #drones
Workshops where drones are built are popping up all over Ukraine at a rapid pace. They are spread across the entire country so that the Russians cannot wipe out all production in one attack. DW visited the test site of a startup that supplies the Ukrainian army with inexpensive drones.
 
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