It may be the first time a drone has destroyed a helicopter in mid-air.
Ukrainian forces deploy more than 100,000 explosive first-person-view drones a month all along the 700-mile front line of Russia’s 28-month wider war on Ukraine. The drones smash into armored vehicles, chase down exposed infantry and follow artillery fire back to its origin in order to target Russian howitzers.
And today one of the small quadcopter drones—remotely steered by an operator wearing a virtual-reality headset—shot down a Russian helicopter, apparently for the first time.
Photos and videos that circulated on social media depict the Mil Mi-8 transport helicopter burning near Donetsk in Russian-occupied eastern Ukraine. “A speedy recovery to the survivors,” one Russian blogger wrote.
This new use of explosive drones has been a long time coming. As long ago as September, Ukrainian operators first tried ramming their flying robots into Russian helicopters mid-flight. The drone threat got so serious that the Russian air force began assigning some helicopters to escort other helicopters.
Bringing down a helicopter is just a matter of removing the miracle that keeps it up there. I’ve always been wary of them, but after seeing that one tragic Ring video of the small helicopter that just came apart in midair and a straight plummet down. Never. I mean they are great strategically, but when they fail…it’s pretty complete.
FYI it’s not a miracle keeping it up there, it’s science.
And no, any failure is not “pretty complete”. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autorotation
They don’t actually fly. They’re just so ugly that the Earth repels them.
I used to be scared to fly in a helicopter. Then I learned how they fly. Now I’m scared when they fly overhead.
It’s just lift vs drag and rotation!
Knew a carrier based Navy search and rescue swimmer, he always said “Helicopters don’t fly, they beat gravity into submission.”
You almost made me snort peas.
So you haven’t seen the video?
Autorotation was…not an option.
Have you heard of the jesus nut?
Yep, but a single mission critical part and everything else being survivable is a far cry from “any failure is pretty complete”.
True.
Still scary af though :-)