How Russia’s Kornet Missile Launcher Works

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2022
  • Video Sponsored by Ridge Wallet:
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    Russia claims their most advanced anti tank missile system, the 9M133 Kornet is capable of taking out any main battle tank with a single shot. It’s a man portable Anti Tank Guided Missile which was designed specifically to take out NATO’s Main Battle Tanks and for a period of time it made Russia the most technologically advanced anti tank forces in the world. In the 2014 invasion of Crimea the Kornets destroyed hundreds of Ukrainian tanks in its first wide spread use so you can understand why Russia thought they were headed in the right direction with this weapon. But we’ll see things change quickly on the battlefield. On paper the Kornets looks like the weapon you would want to take into combat but as we’ll see those numbers don’t always match up with the practical realities of using it in the heat of combat.
    Recently the Kornet has seen extensive use by Russian forces in the Ukraine Invasion where they say it out matches both the US Javelin and the British NLAW missile. In this video we’re going to examine whether or not that’s true. Can you blame me for being just a little bit skeptical here? Some sources refer to it as a 2nd generation while others will say it's the third generation. I feel like its more accurate to call it generation 2.5 honestly. I think the reason for this discrepancy is it’s kind of half way between the two since it's not wire guided, it has a newer laser guided ability but it still lacks an automatic lock on homing feature.
    The Kornet is also known as the AT-14 Springgar according to its NATO designation. Springgar is of course as we all know a reference to a legendary creature from Cornish Fairy lore. I assume the NATO officer who came up with that name wanted to show off their obscure pretentious European fairy knowledge. Someone promote that guy.
    Follow Chris Cappy: / cappyarmy
    email for inquiries: april.wilhelm@teamrecurrent.io
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @Taskandpurpose
    @Taskandpurpose  Год назад +189

    Correction javelin velocity is 583 m/s Sponsor Ridge Wallet: www.ridge.com/TASKANDPURPOSE
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    • @janvesely6353
      @janvesely6353 Год назад +8

      I've seen the higher number several times, I suspect it's coming from confusion with British Javelin SAM.

    • @xxxlonewolf49
      @xxxlonewolf49 Год назад +6

      So the REAL reason US TOWS went to laser guidance...the factory that MADE the wire went out of business. We only bought so many missiles & weren't shooting them so didn't need more. And newer TOWS are tandem warheads so only need one missiles to kill.

    • @Team6OWG
      @Team6OWG Год назад +11

      You got the Javalin missile speed wrong. 2000m/s????? a quick google says the max speed is just under 600m/s.
      It also can defeat APS becasue not of its speed, but cause of its angle. APS dont aim for top down attacks as of yet.

    • @KillersFromTheWest
      @KillersFromTheWest Год назад +5

      Russia lying? Psssssh, I think you mean telling the absolute truth as always. /s

    • @charleslanier1992
      @charleslanier1992 Год назад +3

      Potato patato. Pretty much.

  • @gj1234567899999
    @gj1234567899999 Год назад +1764

    This system really isn’t the same type as the javelin. The javelin system’ weighs 24 kg (54lb) while the koronet system weighs 63kg. (138lb). A single person can barely carry a javelin all day, but nobody is going to be running around with a koronet missile. They aren’t analogous systems. It would be like comparing a saw machine gun to a browning 50 cal.

    • @modenasolone
      @modenasolone Год назад +102

      we gotta make a video about something....

    • @ultimathule1473
      @ultimathule1473 Год назад +25

      RPG-28,

    • @ninjavlad9721
      @ninjavlad9721 Год назад +58

      Kornets are carried by teams it's like comparing a M249 to a m240

    • @adambussert3383
      @adambussert3383 Год назад +132

      More comparable to a tow missile system

    • @treebeardtheent2200
      @treebeardtheent2200 Год назад +21

      @@ninjavlad9721 With Ammo and spare barrels. Might not be THAT heavy, but it is when everything else is added.
      Also, it's reasonable to figure that an invading army has to pack heavier than those defending their own land, or you get things like cold hungry attackers, something that seriously degrades numerical advantages and such.

  • @thebarbershop6693
    @thebarbershop6693 Год назад +1032

    I feel like comparing the Kornet to a Javelin system is like comparing a heavy machine gun system to an LMG. Javelins and NLAWs are easily transported and quickly ready to be used, while the Kornet is more of an emplacement weapon.

    • @hermelnderhans
      @hermelnderhans Год назад +17

      Yeah Most True but don’t forget it’s also very fast to Built up
      But the weight and Portability is a huge different

    • @petrsafranek5725
      @petrsafranek5725 Год назад +39

      @@hermelnderhans well, 29 kg vs Javelins 12 kg..., more like 63 kg with launching system. Its more like comparing F-16 with B-52, totally different class

    • @hermelnderhans
      @hermelnderhans Год назад +4

      @@petrsafranek5725 as is meant the Huge different is weight and mobility but Not Building up and Fire.
      And no you are Comparing Strategic bombers with Fighters 😂 thats far away from Each other

    • @romanberkutov2592
      @romanberkutov2592 Год назад +18

      Джавелин стоит в 10 мать его раз дороже

    • @STDRACO777
      @STDRACO777 Год назад +5

      Something I'm wondering about is how on earth the FOF on the javelin (friend or foe) system is working in Ukraine with them and the Russians using so many similar weapons or if its just disabled?

  • @philipdavis7521
    @philipdavis7521 Год назад +302

    From what I've read, they were pretty successful in Syria - I believe they took out quite a few Turkish Leopard II tanks. I think the type of warfare and topography has to be ideal for nearly any type of small to medium anti-tank missile.

    • @nobodynoname6062
      @nobodynoname6062 Год назад +31

      The Turks were also terrible in their tactical employment of their Leopards.

    • @talkbigdosmall3192
      @talkbigdosmall3192 Год назад +166

      @@nobodynoname6062 yeah dude, everything russia made is terrible, if that weapon successful that mean tank driver terrible employment. but everything US made is god mode, it doesn't matter tank driver is pro, really pro and expert in tank weapon still successful. same with this video, everything russia made is copy from US.😂.. but this not propaganda video, because only Russia know about propaganda other country especially US never use propaganda video 🤣

    • @nobodynoname6062
      @nobodynoname6062 Год назад

      @@talkbigdosmall3192 Man, learn to make yourself understood in English. Russia is a fucking developing country. Them idiots have ten times the fucking casualties in Ukraine that the US had in Iraq. So think again, if you're capable of it.

    • @michaelkoerner4578
      @michaelkoerner4578 Год назад +3

      Turkey also doesn't have any 2a6 or 2a7 variants with up armored turrets

    • @AbuBakr-gm6bf
      @AbuBakr-gm6bf Год назад +46

      @@talkbigdosmall3192 lol the entire us space programm is an copy of soviet one even the engine

  • @ahafeel
    @ahafeel Год назад +79

    The Kornet E was used by the Hezbollah in the 2006 war with Israel. Around 52 merkava tanks were reportedly knocked out by these systems. These were used in conjunction with guerrilla tactics, so that may account for the high kill rate.

    • @AHalz
      @AHalz Год назад +3

      Hezbullah only had a few hundred Kornet missiles, at most. They used Konkur missiles and RPG-29s as well. So far, there isn't any publicly released data on how many Merkava tanks were knocked out with what type of rocket/missile either

    • @ahafeel
      @ahafeel Год назад +9

      @@AHalz there was data when the conflict happened. I have read it

    • @AHalz
      @AHalz Год назад

      @@ahafeel can you please post that? I'm quite curious

    • @edubogota1
      @edubogota1 Год назад +2

      Not true at all, very few merkava tanks have been knocked out and it is mostly done by land mine.

    • @thatdude-cc6ui
      @thatdude-cc6ui 10 месяцев назад +3

      52 tank were hit. Only five were destroyed. A few were knocked out and has returned to service after the war.

  • @AnthonyEvelyn
    @AnthonyEvelyn Год назад +555

    Kornet more or less like a TOW more than the Javelin. The Kornet was effectively deployed against the IDF by the Hizbollah in southern Lebanon where the Israelis lost some Merkavas and other armoured vehicles. The Kornet ATGM should not be underestimated.

    • @theprogressivecynic2407
      @theprogressivecynic2407 Год назад +32

      Only against Merkeva IIIs. They didn't actually manage to destroy any Merkeva IVs, which have Trophy that can knock out incoming missiles. US Abrams, UK Challengers, and German Leopards all are in the process of being updated with Trophy.

    • @reufuraque8771
      @reufuraque8771 Год назад

      They are made by the badguys therefore they are inferior.
      Citizen please report to your local homeland security advisor for further clarification of facts.

    • @theprogressivecynic2407
      @theprogressivecynic2407 Год назад +44

      @@reufuraque8771 No, they aren't inferior and will still kill virtually any tank that doesn't have an APS specifically designed to counter that type of threat. Unfortunately for Russia, most of Israel's enemies get weapons from them, and so Israel was motivated to develop a countermeasure that could kill their best offense, and then this countermeasure was propagated to a couple of Israel's allies, who happen to be the main adversaries of Russia.

    • @Seth9809
      @Seth9809 Год назад +10

      @@theprogressivecynic2407 We've only seen it kill tanks that have half the armor of a modern day Abrams.
      The ones we sell to Iraq are deliberately shit on purpose.

    • @reufuraque8771
      @reufuraque8771 Год назад +10

      @@theprogressivecynic2407 Dude I thought my sarcasm was evident. Yeah my country still fields rpg-2,4,7s we would never underestimate something like the kornet.

  • @charlesmartin1121
    @charlesmartin1121 Год назад +711

    This missile is more in the class of the TOW missile in size, range and effectiveness.

    • @76456
      @76456 Год назад +3

      Russia has made in limit a top attack weapon more comparable to javelin than kornet to it. That top attack weapon is more like a trap. It works at very limited range.

    • @kubagra456
      @kubagra456 Год назад +51

      @@76456 What you're talking about is probably ptkm-1 anti-tank/vehicle mine. It has range of max 100m making it one of best mines... but its nowhere close to range of Javelin, NLAW or Kornet that are all missile launchers

    • @76456
      @76456 Год назад +1

      @@kubagra456 yes. Thx

    • @aitorbleda8267
      @aitorbleda8267 Год назад +3

      i would say it is a much better tow. still, no jav.

    • @emortalelitegaming2667
      @emortalelitegaming2667 Год назад +3

      What about top attack tows

  • @LunarJim69
    @LunarJim69 8 месяцев назад +11

    Kornet missile has just taken out the second Challenger II tank.

    • @scottadkins9902
      @scottadkins9902 Месяц назад

      Mostly the "export" model, just like Saudi Abrams. They're not utilizing the same armor as the country of origin.

  • @definitelyfrank9341
    @definitelyfrank9341 Год назад +46

    The Abram's turret face is probably the only place you could consider armor. The Kornet can without problem penetrate the upper front plate, lower front plate, and through the turret ring.

    • @CrazyGamer-ip2wd
      @CrazyGamer-ip2wd 3 месяца назад

      Yeah only in war thunder, the Abrams tank would eat it for breakfast, we have tried destroying a Abrams with a Abrams before and we couldn't pen the armor with the gun we have which fires shells with much better pen rates than the kornet missle

    • @definitelyfrank9341
      @definitelyfrank9341 3 месяца назад +3

      @@CrazyGamer-ip2wdI can't wait until we see your claim get completely debunked. Allegedly, the Abrams has appeared in Avdiivdka, so it won't be long until we see one get floored.

    • @alestbest
      @alestbest 23 дня назад

      Smile, 2024 is greeting

    • @definitelyfrank9341
      @definitelyfrank9341 23 дня назад

      @@CrazyGamer-ip2wd Well would you look at that? An Abrams got pegged by a Kornet.

    • @CrazyGamer-ip2wd
      @CrazyGamer-ip2wd 21 день назад

      @@definitelyfrank9341 congrats you got me.. oh wait that was a export model of the Abrams meaning it didn't have the DU armor plates or the multitude of armor packages the American Abrams have

  • @jsb2277b
    @jsb2277b Год назад +295

    Would have liked to see a comparison between this and the Stugna-P

    • @oveidasinclair982
      @oveidasinclair982 Год назад +53

      I think they're about the same, the Ukrainians have used the Stugna-P with great effect, but they're set up in ambush defensive positions and the operator isn't sitting at the tripod (source of fire position) guiding the missile in. The Ukrainian system is safer for the operators, but like the Kornet not as man portable as the Javelin, or NLAW

    • @Freeukraine45
      @Freeukraine45 Год назад +33

      Stugna-p strikes have reached out to 4.3km i think, also the operator of stugna doesn't have to be next to the system so thats good

    • @meisterproper8304
      @meisterproper8304 Год назад +10

      @@Freeukraine45 such a good system for propaganda purposes. Similar stuff should soon pop up all over the middle east

    • @UzumakiNaruto_
      @UzumakiNaruto_ Год назад +35

      @@Freeukraine45
      I'd rather have the Stugna than the Kornet. Not having to be near the launcher and also being able to aim with a display is so much better.

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Год назад +16

      @@meisterproper8304 Hmmm Stugna P is sure showing it's worth theres plenty of footage of people just recording whats on the control screen.

  • @250Skyer250
    @250Skyer250 Год назад +143

    The Kornet spins for a different much more mondane reason.
    Its not Laser Designated but Laser Beam riding. Meaning the missile just flyes around the laser trying to keep the laser behind it as best as possible, thus spinning around the laser.
    The Russians are using this system a lot.

    • @seekrengr751
      @seekrengr751 Год назад +18

      True that, regarding laser beam-riding. Almost everyone confuses a Semi-Active Laser (SAL) designated system with a passive laser beam-riding system, such as the UK Starstreak. Videos of the Starstreak show the same pattern of flyout, a telltale for a beam-rider. The projected laser patterns for such beam-riders do a pretty good job of missile guidance, and the orbital patterns are intentional.
      Advantages of the completely passive system are that laser warning sensors are not triggered, which means that only passive warning sensors will be capable of triggering obscurant CM. Chris did mention that the rocket motor is unusually bright, so this would be possible, but it's never as good a trigger as a designator laser.
      I worked on one of these beam-riders back in the 1980s called ADATS, designed as a dual anti-armor and air-defense system. Due to high cost and poor development of mission profiles, it was only sold to two nations (Canada and Thailand) which retired them within a decade or so because maintenance costs were too high with a tiny installed base (50 systems). It was produced by Oerlikon-Buehrle (now Rheinmetall) but designed at Lockheed Martin Missile Systems. With better system design it might have been lower cost and successfully sold to the US military, with a Mach 3 missile (much more effective than a slow missile like Kornet, as Starstreak shows) and 900mm RHA penetration, but the HEAT/frag warhead had very poor frag performance and the vehicle was also very unreliable. Hard to do two such different missions well.

    • @johnnybravo5406
      @johnnybravo5406 Год назад

      I gotta look into the m this I'm not going to lie

    • @rinaldoman3331
      @rinaldoman3331 Год назад +1

      @@seekrengr751 wow you are so cool man. Wonder what situation about ADATS right now.

    • @barbosaguzman6101
      @barbosaguzman6101 Год назад

      Whats the advantages and disadvantages between the two?

    • @250Skyer250
      @250Skyer250 Год назад +4

      ​@@barbosaguzman6101 Laser Beam Riders have the advantage of being simpler and cheaper overall, they can function with a comparatively weak laser so it has a higher chance of a laser warning receiver not triggering, It is not affected by smoke, so the gunner can try his best of guiding it towards the target even if smoke is deployed. Their disadvantage is somewhat reduced accuracy, It can only fly a direct flight path towards the target (Top attack being either more difficult to achieve or not possible.
      A Semi Active Laser guidance has the Advantages of: Doesn't have to fly directly towards the target, it can loft, fly up and come from above which increases range and potentially hits the top armour of the target, you can also program them what flight path the should use fairly easily, They have the potential of being more precise.
      Disadvatages are: More costly production, they require a much more powerful laser as the missile needs to see the reflection of the laser and not just the laser itself, smoke will 99% of the time make the missile go dumb because it can't see any laser anymore.

  • @analytics8055
    @analytics8055 8 месяцев назад +10

    The weapon seems a superior product that cost only $26K, flies 10K and defeats Abrams tanks costing $8 million. It seems Russia has done it again. AK47, Sputnik, now this .

  • @Kebria
    @Kebria Год назад +156

    The upgraded version of Kornet-M is equipped with an automatic target tracker with operational range of 8-10 kms.

    • @AHalz
      @AHalz Год назад +19

      Other Kornets also have top attack ability as well

    • @rafomic4210
      @rafomic4210 Год назад +1

      ​@@lime4rvthats kalibr hahhaa

    • @rafomic4210
      @rafomic4210 Год назад +2

      IT Tracks a moving target ?

    • @AHalz
      @AHalz Год назад +8

      @@rafomic4210 yes, automatic target tracking will track a moving target

    • @brookwhiteman9810
      @brookwhiteman9810 Год назад +3

      Stugna doesn't have that ragne but has a top attack mode and the launcher can be placed 50 ft from the launch modem meaning it can be placed high up and operator would be safe. It also has 2 ka-52 helicopter kills with footage. It's my fav reloadable atgm. I'd pick it over the kornet any day

  • @fortweek_7389
    @fortweek_7389 Год назад +288

    Canadian volunteer sniper Wally in his interview sad that he had to become a Javelin operator because the nature of combat in the eastern front had changed. His complaint was that he never had a chance to shoot his javelin because tanks were constantly out of range.

    • @sigbauer9782
      @sigbauer9782 Год назад +27

      @Obama yup.

    • @williamgray9692
      @williamgray9692 Год назад

      @Obama russian tanks don’t have thermal imaging. only the best of the best. to expensive, they are too broke.

    • @karl5056
      @karl5056 Год назад

      @Obama Wali was a spoiled Canadian living off his laurels cut in Afghanistan against a insurgency wearing man jammies and sandals. He left Ukraine mugged back into reality that the Russian Federation doesnt play war, they win them.

    • @nicholasconder4703
      @nicholasconder4703 Год назад +32

      @@sigbauer9782 If he was fighting in Donbass, I wouldn't blame him. I think they are all getting close to the ends of their ropes there. They really need to be rotated out of combat as soon as possible.

    • @alexseguin5245
      @alexseguin5245 Год назад +65

      @@nicholasconder4703 He was originally deployed on the Kyiv front. After they won there, he was redeployed in the Donbas. He almost died after a tank shot spread shrapnel around his group. Two of his Ukrainians buddies got mangled by the shrapnel and died on the scene. I think most people would just want to go back home after that.

  • @analytics8055
    @analytics8055 8 месяцев назад +2

    Any missile that can fly 10 K is a major achievement.

  • @jamesmandahl444
    @jamesmandahl444 Год назад +12

    The secret to the penetrating power of kornet is a couple things. The shape of the lens and diameter as well as the means of detonation. The biggest though is the composition of the lens. It is a copper and powdered depleted uranium alloy matrix. This alone allows even small diameter RPGs to have very impressive penetration performance.

  • @kylep007
    @kylep007 Год назад +224

    I want Task & Purpose to do a video on Taiwan’s military. I’m curious on his thoughts on the PRC’s odds of successfully invading and if Russia’s struggles in Ukraine have discouraged Beijing.

    • @jeremyholland4527
      @jeremyholland4527 Год назад +9

      I would love to see Chris tackle that too.

    • @u2beuser714
      @u2beuser714 Год назад +32

      One thing for sure, the west cant sanction china the same way they did sanction russia, since many are still pretty much dependent on chinese manufactured goods and stuff

    • @goatclub6943
      @goatclub6943 Год назад +4

      I honestly wouldn't be surprised if he's already working on one

    • @Ba11leFieldAce
      @Ba11leFieldAce Год назад +11

      Binkov has a few good videos on the subject.

    • @Sophistry0001
      @Sophistry0001 Год назад +18

      @@u2beuser714 Everyone thought Russia was going to tank from the sanctions too, but they somehow seem like they've managed to pivot and bounce back and the ruble is doing just fine, jumping 40% against he US dollar since January. So it may be we can pivot in a quick way if necessary away from buying Chinese goods. Especially if there is an air of patriotism attached to it where people start to police/shame each other.

  • @danielmackormack8524
    @danielmackormack8524 Год назад

    Thank you for the video , always a pleasure to see your work Chris !! 💯👍

  • @dariozanze4929
    @dariozanze4929 Год назад +16

    Small correction. Javelin max range is 2000m in top attack mode.
    In direct mode it is about 5000m

  • @deusvult7721
    @deusvult7721 Год назад +225

    Just to make things clear, our average infantryman confused Crimea with Donbas.

    • @jsb2277b
      @jsb2277b Год назад +77

      Yeah I must have missed the massive armor battles of Crimea

    • @snowsnow4231
      @snowsnow4231 Год назад

      this is all you need to know about western experts
      3 months past, still unable to tell a difference between a coal mining province and a peninsula with resorts and naval bases
      shows complete lack of willingness to actually learn anything or dive deeper into any details
      Ukraine is good and innocent, Putin is evil, Russia is bad, Bucha atrocities, Russians eating babies - congratulations, you are now an expert on Ukraine, according to the western media

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek Год назад +18

      oooooh yeah that was rather confusing. I was pretty sure that there was essentially no combat in crimea, certainly no organized ukrainian resistance.

    • @oknevals
      @oknevals Год назад +32

      He is likeable guy but, sometimes he seems either clueless, misinformed or most likely just given bad script by his "sponsors".

    • @unclewerner
      @unclewerner Год назад +4

      How dare you! Donbas is not meant to be mentioned, especially not in this critical time of another rescue operation.

  • @jake4194
    @jake4194 Год назад +89

    Powerful AT misslile but I dont think it even classifies as a manpad, too big and heavy.

    • @LordMarchewka
      @LordMarchewka Год назад +30

      It'd be difficult to classify any AT missile as a MANPADS.

    • @psychomantis9442
      @psychomantis9442 Год назад +3

      @@LordMarchewka here to say the same, lol

    • @BulletSponge178
      @BulletSponge178 Год назад +1

      Menpad?

    • @Chopstorm.
      @Chopstorm. Год назад +8

      Manpat, not manpad. Manpad is man portable air defense.

    • @andreaskul1
      @andreaskul1 Год назад

      @@LordMarchewkaSeen some Stugna-Ps shoot down helicopters though

  • @reginaldlagrone5082
    @reginaldlagrone5082 5 месяцев назад +2

    The Kornet is the best ATGM in the world, it stops everything it engages.

  • @blackwhite5078
    @blackwhite5078 8 месяцев назад +2

    The Javelin lost its advantages when the Russians put a steel cage on top of the tank 😂😂😂

  • @Max_Da_G
    @Max_Da_G Год назад +41

    Javelin, while Fire-and-forget, has a different set of disadvantages, which is normal for any weapon system. Ones in Ukraine, are basically almost past their use-by date. Secondly, to launch a Javelin, one must perform a 30-second lock-on during which the seeker is cooled from a coolant bottle. Now if target disappears, the procedure has to stop, and operator has one more attempt at it before the bottle is empty and whole thing becomes dead weight. Or at least the pre-launch unit. Kornet can re-lock the target as many times as one wants.
    Top-attack mode can only be done from a certain range of over several hundred meters (can't remember exact number), and while that missile is fast, it's also unimpressive in terms of penetration: around 650mm RHA. Which tells us that if fired in direct mode (faster), it wouldn't penetrate most tanks today if it hits an ERA-covered spot on a T-72B3 for instance. Kornet would penetrate pretty much any tank in service today.
    Another thing is that Javelin is a MUCH more expensive weapon. After all that IR seeker isn't cheap by any measure. We can have 2 Kornet launchers as opposed to 1 Javelin. with all the associated increase in defensive capability.
    Another thing about Javelin is its limited use against non-IR contrasting target. You can use Kornet against enemy pillbox or fortification. Can Javelin target that?

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Год назад +1

      Why would you think you need IR targeting for a LOS attack on a static target?

    • @MrDmitriRavenoff
      @MrDmitriRavenoff Год назад +1

      If it can hit a moving target, what makes you think it can't hit a building?

    • @Max_Da_G
      @Max_Da_G Год назад +2

      @@MrDmitriRavenoff If Javelin can detect the IR signature, then for sure. But again: it needs to detect the building itself in IR. But then damn that's one expensive-ass use of a self-guided missile: against a building.

    • @juavi6987
      @juavi6987 Год назад +1

      It was used against fortifications in Afghanistan. It is possible, because it has an IMAGING infrared, that actually gives a picture rather then tracking just the hottest spot in sight

    • @gumby2241
      @gumby2241 8 месяцев назад +6

      the Javeline doesn't just cost twice as much, more like 10x as much.

  • @jigzonyt517
    @jigzonyt517 Год назад +245

    Im no military expert but comparing this and a jav or nlaw is like comparing a pistol and a turret mounted gun One is easily portable and the other looks not so easy to carry. One is good for popping out of a dug out and firing on site ans the other needs transporting and sitting out on display. It certainly looks mote capable but its all about application and differing circumstances

    • @name-yn6vu
      @name-yn6vu Год назад

      Yeah, but part of it is a difference in doctorine. Russians use RGPs in infantry teams I believe, as they are meant to close the gap quickly in accordance with soviet tactics, so range in infantry AT equipment is not really important

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 Год назад

      What would be a closer comparison. im sure something exsits thats more close

    • @name-yn6vu
      @name-yn6vu Год назад +1

      @@pleasedontwatchthese9593 rpg vs javelin or kornet vs tow

    • @alexmitchell9336
      @alexmitchell9336 Год назад

      Doesn't matter what comparison is made, the same conclusion is reached - russian technology sucks ass

    • @creesmith2794
      @creesmith2794 Год назад +3

      @@name-yn6vu The rpg is too old to compare to a javelin. Its like comparing the t70 to a modern m1-abrams. Yes one is clearly better, but they're from completely different eras.

  • @gavinrothery8825
    @gavinrothery8825 Год назад +162

    You mention at the start that Russia destroyed hundreds of Ukrainian tanks when they took Crimea in 2014. Wasn't that invasion done without much of a real fight? I remember the Russians appearing with no markings on their uniforms surrounding Ukrainian bases and them backing out and leaving Crimea to Russia without a real fight. The Crimean invasion resulted in only five or six deaths, it wasn't a huge battle and hundreds of tanks weren't destroyed there?

    • @williamlloyd3769
      @williamlloyd3769 Год назад +18

      Agree from accounts I’ve read.
      Maybe there was a tank graveyard in Crimea in 2014?

    • @andreaskul1
      @andreaskul1 Год назад +1

      Tanks in storage

    • @LoisoPondohva
      @LoisoPondohva Год назад +82

      That whole sentence in the video was a mess.
      First, he meant Donbas, nobody shot any Kornets in Crimea.
      Second, there weren't hundreds of tanks, just dozens over the course of many years.
      Third, the Kornets in the photos were 2 unexploded ones from around Kramatorsk and Luhansk around 2014-2017.

    • @Anubis2828
      @Anubis2828 Год назад +23

      Russia already had military in Svestapol because they rented the port from Ukraine. There was not a war, just a referendum.

    • @meisterproper8304
      @meisterproper8304 Год назад +25

      @@Anubis2828 more like a quick occupation followed by a referendum

  • @erikmitchell6458
    @erikmitchell6458 Год назад +4

    It’s an improvement on the TOW missle. I think vehicle mounts are most useful. Static defense is just ok

  • @derekbilston9290
    @derekbilston9290 8 месяцев назад +5

    The Kornet that the Russians are using at the moment appears to be an upgrade. 2 Challenger tanks destroyed already.

  • @user-te7rf8ik7z
    @user-te7rf8ik7z Год назад +32

    10:45 C'mon, javelin doesn't fly at 2000 m/s. That would be insane. It flies 15 seconds to 2km, so it is like at least 10 times slower than you said.

    • @user-te7rf8ik7z
      @user-te7rf8ik7z Год назад +4

      Meaning it is slower than the kornet.

    • @Sophistry0001
      @Sophistry0001 Год назад +7

      lol that's over mach 6, turns out we had hypersonic missiles all along, and they're shoulder fired to-boot! Good catch, I didn't catch that while watching.

    • @Ukraineaissance2014
      @Ukraineaissance2014 Год назад +3

      @@user-te7rf8ik7z kornet is around 250 m per second, javelin 300 m per second.

    • @thephoenix756
      @thephoenix756 Год назад +4

      @@Ukraineaissance2014
      No, the Javelin travels at 140 m/s

    • @Ukraineaissance2014
      @Ukraineaissance2014 Год назад +3

      @@thephoenix756 nope, top speed 300 m per second. Dont bother me with your quick googling nonsense.

  • @m.abusada
    @m.abusada Год назад +18

    for correction; The latest versions of it, which are installed on the Tiger car, have the indirect attack feature, as well as the fire and forget system

    • @michaelccozens
      @michaelccozens Год назад

      Um, the Kornet-EM is noted as having an autotracker, but where are you getting the idea that a beam-rider has a top-attack mode? How would that work?

    • @sheeplord4976
      @sheeplord4976 2 месяца назад

      @@michaelccozensProbably the same way the TOW-2B does it

  • @fredb303
    @fredb303 7 месяцев назад +1

    Russia’s Kornet has a longer range; the operator just needs to keep the laser on target. I'm sure in a few weeks we will see what they do against the Abrams tanks.

  • @scpgaming-452
    @scpgaming-452 8 месяцев назад +3

    very badass this atgm destroy challenger-2

  • @lincolnleme
    @lincolnleme Год назад +40

    Uhh, I am sure it was an oversight, but I highly doubt the Javelin travels at 2000 m/s, that’s Mach 5.8, that would make it a Hypersonic Missile. For comparison, the AIM-120C AMRAAM Air-Air missile reaches a top speed of around Mach 4, and only at high altitude where atmospheric resistance is much less of a problem.

    • @grammoore
      @grammoore Год назад +13

      I was looking for this comment, lol. 2000 m/s is faster than 90 percent of APFSDS from tanks.

    • @paulhickie6974
      @paulhickie6974 2 месяца назад

      I looked it up 150m/s.

  • @cubeflinger
    @cubeflinger Год назад +9

    Much love for this channel. I really enjoy the tactical analysis. Peace out from the UK

  • @spoodermens
    @spoodermens Год назад +1

    To successfully throw off a laser guided ATGM you have to either: 1. Have IR dazzler systems on your vehicle capable of detecting said lasers. 2. If no dazzlers, you have to have visual confirmation of an atgm backblast signature. When dealing with this low profile tripod mounted soviet atgm's their backblaster signature is very hard to spot. With all of these launchers being fairly man portable and compact, Russian infantrymen could utilize mass surprise fires from multiple different angles, and potentially using adjacent armored or mechanized units to draw the eyes of the intended armor away from flanking atgm's.

  • @kingfish2703
    @kingfish2703 10 месяцев назад +3

    Kornet has a top attack capability and newer ones are also capable of tracking their target autonomous.

  • @dj_unicorn5608
    @dj_unicorn5608 Год назад +14

    Love seeing you post

    • @Taskandpurpose
      @Taskandpurpose  Год назад +4

      thanks for watching , I really appreciate everyone's time

  • @76456
    @76456 Год назад +82

    It has 1300mm RHA max penetration. But it isnt top attack sow, it has its own caracteristics. It will perform well in open field. Depends on doctrine

    • @warbrain1053
      @warbrain1053 Год назад +1

      Another thing. APS becomes more and more standart on newer MBTs. Why wait until the rocket hits when you can jist not be hit/locked?

    • @76456
      @76456 Год назад

      @@warbrain1053 ik, that would be solved whit rocket spam

    • @warbrain1053
      @warbrain1053 Год назад +7

      @@76456 the problem is APS is far from one use. You shoot once. Tank detects direction. Aims at you. Eradicated. Tank is unharmed
      Tanks are still far from obsolete. A gun round is far faster than a missile

    • @ultimathule1473
      @ultimathule1473 Год назад +4

      @@warbrain1053 RPG28 can penetrate 1300mm after ERA and has been used brutaly by the Russians in the Ukraine war, it is just an RPG whith brutal penetration

    • @warbrain1053
      @warbrain1053 Год назад

      @@ultimathule1473 i am not talking about ERA. never had. I was talking about APS, a system that shoots down danger before it touches the tank

  • @burnttoast111
    @burnttoast111 Год назад +18

    Kornets seemed to do pretty well in Syria, when used by the YPG. Also, I think some Houthis took out a Saudi M1 Abrams with a side turret hit. Seems like a capable missile. The Stugna-P is much better in that you can operate it from a remote location, rather than being stuck under the launcher.

    • @jabb161
      @jabb161 Год назад +10

      True they were also used in south lebanon and took out lots of Merkava tanks. This report is biasd to say the least

    • @burnttoast111
      @burnttoast111 Год назад +7

      @@jabb161 Yeah, there is a tendency by a lot of people in the west to think Russian equipment is trash. Generally, I think much of the Russian equipment is good *IF* it is maintained and used properly, and while it may not be the best in all areas, it generally is cost-effective and reliable. The Russian military has proven to be poor, although they do have some good units. Although the command structure is a major problem for all of it, along with some major cultural problems.

    • @kenken8857
      @kenken8857 Год назад +1

      With a side turret hit an old RPG would do it - tanks have their impressive armor only on the front side for weight reasons.
      In fact you could shoot up all modern MBTs with an 8.8 from the side or back.

  • @Kazy-nn3vr
    @Kazy-nn3vr 8 месяцев назад +1

    Kornets have been making Bradelys and MaxxPro explode like popcorn. So yeah, I wouldn't take it granted.

    • @noone7692
      @noone7692 8 месяцев назад

      Add 2 x challenger 2 on that list

  • @coolkid5972
    @coolkid5972 Год назад +13

    Thanks for the consistent uploads Chris!

  • @SalveMonesvol
    @SalveMonesvol Год назад +55

    10:46 That's impossibly fast for the Javelin. It must be 2000 KM/h. That's supersonic, about mach 1.6 to 1.7.
    2km/s would be hypersonic and the missile would likely not be able to take the heat from the compressed air on the nose.

    • @JekaZMD
      @JekaZMD Год назад +3

      I was also like what the, that's way too fast.

    • @Danji_Coppersmoke
      @Danji_Coppersmoke Год назад +10

      Probably he mistaken with the info for Javelin surface-to-air (not ATGM) . That S2A goes about Mach 1.7. The ATGM Javelin is

    • @Wick9876
      @Wick9876 Год назад +4

      That might be the old British mach 1.7 Javelin AA missile. The FGM-148 under discussion is 140 m/s.

    • @exo068
      @exo068 Год назад

      Modern APS can stop the javelin also. The US tested the StrikeShield against projectiles going 1700m/s+ so it can just stop it.

    • @thisguyyyyyyy2723
      @thisguyyyyyyy2723 Год назад +3

      Yeah I saw that and just thought “hold the fuck up, what?”
      Pretty sure he’s also gone into detail about the Javelin’s flight time and range in other videos, so I don’t know how he thought 2000 m/s sounded right

  • @john.rc.3274
    @john.rc.3274 Год назад +7

    Not only is war horrific. It is also VERY complicated. Thanks for showing both realities in a way that is somewhat comprehensible (although still complicated) for some of us civilians.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад +1

    5:38, Cappy, you sh'tbird!!
    Lololol

  • @thrash208
    @thrash208 Год назад +7

    Apples and oranges.
    Javelin and NLAW is a mobile shoulder mounted anti tank weapon this is a fixed anti tank weapon... very different things

  • @marcusdean3557
    @marcusdean3557 Год назад +82

    The Stugna-P has been shown to be very effective against tanks.

    • @murphy7801
      @murphy7801 Год назад +1

      The old Milan missle is plenty deadly

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Год назад +1

      @@murphy7801 Milan 2T......yeah. But its still being phased out in favour of newer ATGM in Indian Army. Even though the other side (Pakistan) has meh Armour and no IFVs. Its days are over, I think.

    • @pisko1969
      @pisko1969 Год назад +6

      Stugna really looks nice. On paper, everything is perfect. Available videos, of course, support this narrative. As idea, for sure is almost perfect for such type of weapon. But, one thing raises concern... Ukrainian government asks for other weapons, not for support of own Stugna production. Something is not perfect in reality even if idea is without obvious flaws. If money was the problem before war, now it's not I assume. Maybe, for such type of pretty static weapons, it is problematic when enemy fire back? You can't run with Stugna same as with Kornet, or something else. Looks like it needs some further upgrade.

    • @Tonyx.yt.
      @Tonyx.yt. Год назад +3

      because they only show successful attacks, that's called propaganda my friend

    • @slartybarfastb3648
      @slartybarfastb3648 Год назад +4

      @@Tonyx.yt. There's a whole bunch of successful attacks. I mean many, many, many successful attacks. Why sit through video of the misses?
      No amount of propaganda takes away from the abundance of success.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад +1

    00:33, I'm going to jump the gun and guess "True. Completely, wholly and fully, and 100 percent True!! Lolol

  • @jafarhon
    @jafarhon Год назад +2

    Saw bunch of videos with this Nasty Kornet being used in Ukraine, im impressed, hitting moving targets well over 2 miles, and when it hits you bet that target will not survive, very big bang.

  • @prfwrx2497
    @prfwrx2497 Год назад +17

    10:40 I think you meant 2000 feet per second.
    Fwiw, 120 and 125mm APFSDS has a muzzle velocity of 1700 m/s.
    660 m/s is Hella fast for an AT missile. It's almost mach 2. It's about as fast as a rifle bullet on target.

    • @user-te7rf8ik7z
      @user-te7rf8ik7z Год назад +2

      Sidewinder missiles fly at 1100 m/s, and they are for sure waaay faster than the Javelin

    • @user-te7rf8ik7z
      @user-te7rf8ik7z Год назад

      Even 2000 ft/s seems optimistic, I think he just put an extra zero on accident

    • @Blarg54321
      @Blarg54321 Год назад +1

      Yep. 2000 m/sec would be mach 5.8 at sea level -- hypersonic.

    • @ThePurussaurus
      @ThePurussaurus Год назад

      Yes I was really baffled at first, then I thought "why would you bother carrying a HEAT warhead when your missile can go at 2km/s", I did some research and then I got the suspicion that he may not have gotten it quite correct in the video. Thank you for helping me confirm my thoughts.

    • @atomicspartan131
      @atomicspartan131 Год назад +1

      @@user-te7rf8ik7z that’s not an AT missile though. That’s an air-to-air missile

  • @archibaldthesimple
    @archibaldthesimple Год назад +10

    "Maybe, just maybe the Russians are lying to us" made me lol

  • @user-nr3hr9lu1v
    @user-nr3hr9lu1v Год назад +2

    The most important thing that people nowadays must understand is following:
    How much costs one peace of "these" or "that"!!! It DOESN'T MATTER that Kornett or AK are not "100%" supreme! They work actually pretty good - and they are already all around the world!
    Today is not The Wild West - very rarely is coming up to "stand off" moments - its a complex battlefield!
    That's why - when you compare Javelin vs. Kornett - it's Kornett the winner!
    Battle characteristics are almost the same - actually Kornett can be used usually up to 8 km!..even 10!.. twice more than Javelin. Its dependable sometimes from the weather - but it doesn't matter!!
    Javelin - 140 - 175 thousand $ /for the army around 85 000$/
    Kornett - 10 000 $ ...for the army maybe 8000.
    This was always a battle of Economy, and the Russia is 4-5 times the US - that's all you need to know!
    By the way - in one battalion there are 3 vehicles with 16 Kornett rocket each!!
    You have almost 50 rockets .
    Even if you have a 7-8 the newest M1A2SEPv4 Abrams - at least 4 will be "gone" in a imaginable attack against "Kornett" Battalion... and you have also T90, 152mm Hotwizer..and so long.
    ..and by the way - all of that is pretty clear to the US Command. That's why they don't want to get "personally involved" in any battle with Russia.. and are using a proxy war variants - Ukraine

  • @BLINDTUBEMARES
    @BLINDTUBEMARES Год назад

    02:50- Wow. That statue is about 300m from where I live! Crouch End, London

  • @MrLathor
    @MrLathor Год назад +73

    Little surprised nobody caught the fact that he said a Javalin could go nearly Mach 6. Glad they corrected it.

    • @dankaloww1067
      @dankaloww1067 Год назад +22

      Lol, I was like 2,000 m/s. That's literally high speed anti air missile territory.
      The real speeds are between 300-400m/s Which is the same as the Kornet.

    • @unbannablebob395
      @unbannablebob395 Год назад

      Little surprised nobody caught the fact that he claims there was some massive invasion of Crimea in 2014. The people who took over already lived there.

    • @superstar8162
      @superstar8162 Год назад +7

      2,000 m/s or Mach 6 is hypersonic speed. Need a scram jet engine. Wrong information.

    • @williamblaker2628
      @williamblaker2628 Год назад +8

      Javelin travels at Mach 1.7, or 583 m/s

    • @djl5634
      @djl5634 Год назад +3

      @@superstar8162 not really. Thaad missile defense has a missile that goes mach 8 hypersonic. And it isn't scram jet. Most hypersonic missiles aren't scram jet.

  • @mhh7544
    @mhh7544 Год назад +14

    I was in anti tanks, at the time there were recoiless platoon and ATGM platoon in a company . ATGM used Russian M 82 wire guided missile, US TOWs started to replace them , but our company still used Russian one . I was in recoiless platoon but what I understood TOW was superior, but this was long ago.

    • @superm.3199
      @superm.3199 Год назад

      In which country did you serve?

    • @mhh7544
      @mhh7544 Год назад +1

      @@superm.3199 Finland.

    • @superm.3199
      @superm.3199 Год назад +1

      @@mhh7544 OK. That explains the fact you firstly had soviet weapons and then American

    • @mhh7544
      @mhh7544 Год назад

      @@superm.3199 I had pretty good walk through of soviet tanks, we had T 72s, Russian APCs and IFVs. We were stressed to aim always between the hull and the turret, we were told about the dangers of that ammo carousel. Finland is very bad tank country, eastern border at its whole lenght is nothing but dense forest, only few roads cut it.

    • @m1821Z
      @m1821Z 11 месяцев назад +1

      The Fagot (M82) is incomparable to the Kornet. The Kornet isn't wire guided and is superior in performance compared to the TOW and can also do top-attack.

  • @hadeedmalik719
    @hadeedmalik719 Год назад

    Can we get a video on the Sugna-P, with all the press around NLAW and the Javelin it comes off as a bit of an unsung hero.

  • @finnm.2582
    @finnm.2582 4 месяца назад +2

    The best thing you can do in a tank is still not to get hit by anything. Getting hit by an APDSFDS Shell is horrific, getting hit by a shaped charge warhead or an explosive formed penetrator is also horrific. The Kornet also has a variant that fires a Fuel-Air-Explosive Warhead, which is utterly destructive against fortified positions and bunkers.
    But yeah, technically it’s still a SACLOS guided missile like the TOW, with the difference that pretty much all modern Russian ATGMs are Beam-Riders and not wire guided.

  • @nicholasconder4703
    @nicholasconder4703 Год назад +139

    I think the Javelin's biggest asset is the "fire and forget" ability. With a Javelin you can fire the missile and then shift position to a potentially safer location (like a trench or bunker), while with a Kornet you are stuck in your firing location until after you hit the target. Those 2-5 seconds of time you lose could mean the difference between life or death.

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Год назад +18

      Depends on tactics. In modernized Indian Infantry battalions, for example, there are two types of ATGM available:-
      1.) 3rd Gen ATGM with 2.5 km range (Javelin-type, either Israeli Spike or Indian MPATGM)
      2.) 2nd Gen ATGM with 5 km range (Russian Kornet or Indian CLGM/SAMHO)
      .
      So depending on how far away the target is, the ATGM DET deploys either a fire and forget type or a beam riding type.

    • @dickmelsonlupot7697
      @dickmelsonlupot7697 Год назад +16

      it depends on how it is used though.
      In an offensive battle, the Javelin would win hands down due to how portable it is and with the F & F ability.
      But in terms of defense like say defending a building or even a city, this is where the Kornet shines mostly because of it's longer range than the Javey since in a defensive war, you try your damned hardest to make the distance between you and the enemy as far as possible and with the Kornet's long range, you can keep them as far away as possible without worrying about return fire.
      The Javey's F & F ability isn't really that realistically useful in a defensive battle since your avenues for "escape" and hiding are small plus with the shorter range of the Javey, the enemy would already be near enough from you to start yeeting rounds onto you. The escaping ability is also a bit moot since in a defensive fight, the enemy already knows about your general location so hiding really isn't going to help you since they already know the direction where to throw rounds at you.

    • @milanstankovic4149
      @milanstankovic4149 Год назад +17

      But this video is FULL of false information!!!
      That "fire and forget" can be also a biggest flaw on Javelin.One problem is battery that power supply Javelin before firing...Can be low after couple minutes.We can see that now in Ukraina.
      Second thing is price of missile for Javelin.It is VERY expensive.Why?
      Because is "fire and forget"!
      Every "fire and forget" atgm have a expensive missile.Every missile is computer.And because is SMART but also expensive!!!
      Launcher is just pipe and small electro unit on.Looke just in size:launcher is just a empty pipe,and looke a size of missile and thickness.Everything important is there.
      On another side,Kornet have a cheap missile because guiding comp is on luancher.

    • @VladimirTironi
      @VladimirTironi Год назад +12

      @@milanstankovic4149 it's so cheap that Russian army couldn't afford to equip all the units.

    • @VladimirTironi
      @VladimirTironi Год назад +6

      And yes.... Expensive? Compared to what? How much are T72/ T/80 T/90 tanks? What about crew life?

  • @TheWorldEnd2
    @TheWorldEnd2 Год назад +128

    The kornet has one fatal flaw, though, which is its guidance system. When the operator lines their laser on the tank, the laser warning receiver mounted on most mbt's fielded by the west would go off. This informs the crew to deploy smoke countermeasures, or if set to AUTO, will deploy the smoke by itself. In most modern weapon systems, the gunner can also swing their turret to the source of the laser and send one away, taking out the kornet operator. Not so effective now...

    • @sciarpecyril
      @sciarpecyril Год назад +48

      Most of the time the laser beam is keeped about 2-3 meters above the target. Pointing the laser directly at the target occurs when the missile is on approach and the countermeasures will not be effective enough.

    • @truekhmer7292
      @truekhmer7292 Год назад +29

      @@sciarpecyril yeah every decent missile operator is taught not to aim directly at the intended target until necessary

    • @sciarpecyril
      @sciarpecyril Год назад +3

      @@truekhmer7292, exactly.

    • @ramonpunsalang3397
      @ramonpunsalang3397 Год назад +19

      Very similar to the Stugna-P employed by Ukraine. Their operators have learned to cunningly lase an object near the tank to avoid the laser detector then paint the tank a few seconds before impact.

    • @SlavGod47
      @SlavGod47 Год назад +34

      Correct, however, in addition to what others have said, I can confirm American vehicles do NOT have laser warning receivers at all
      Hell, the SEP v3 Abrams just got around to mounting the Trophy APS system imported from Israel bc the US couldn't design an APS system worth a damn for the Abrams
      People HEAVILY underestimate the vulnerabilities of the US military to a point that concerns me. Which is surprising because everyone harps on Russia for mass employing "outdated, Cold War weapons"...when we use systems as old or older than them, in similar states too

  • @kettujabamiesukkeliukko
    @kettujabamiesukkeliukko 9 месяцев назад

    Now I know why ATGM's spin and move around. Thanks for educating me!

  • @unclezlatin1495
    @unclezlatin1495 Год назад +1

    90% of comments be like
    "compareing this to a jav or an nlaw is like compareing a ......... to a .........."

  • @AlanTheBeast100
    @AlanTheBeast100 Год назад +15

    The explanation of why the Russian AT's follow the squirely path was very interesting. See a lot of other Ukrainian vids where Stugna-P missiles also have a similar flight path.

    • @ivanmonahhov2314
      @ivanmonahhov2314 Год назад +2

      the real reson is that uses not fins for steering but a small pulse rocket engine on the side , it rotataes so it can steer using only one engine.

    • @vladimir0rus
      @vladimir0rus Год назад

      they need to circle around of laser beam to not lose it

    • @lukewhitehouse4103
      @lukewhitehouse4103 Год назад

      Exactly the same with KA-52/Mi-28 Vikhrs missiles

  • @MLN-yz4ph
    @MLN-yz4ph Год назад +4

    I agree that the wire guided had major issues vs laser guided. Still I have seen Dragon gunners that could "Nose down" the missile just above a target for a top attack and even guide around obstacles to get to a hidden target. This was not the rule I know still at some point I really hope we can get some of the same type of "Trim" control with laser.

    • @adilachahbar3154
      @adilachahbar3154 Год назад +1

      He forgot that tanks now have a detector if they are targeted with a laser Sometimes wire-based anti-armor missiles are better than lasers

    • @cadennorris960
      @cadennorris960 Год назад +1

      The TOW (replacement for the dragon I believe) has a laser guided variant.

  • @BibEvgen
    @BibEvgen Год назад +2

    There were no damaged tanks in Crimea, there was no war, 2 people died there.

  • @Nbmstr2000
    @Nbmstr2000 Год назад

    10:39 the main problem from kornet are unstable movement that make active armor hard to take down that missle

  • @PresidentEvil
    @PresidentEvil Год назад +3

    Kornet is basically a russian TOW, not in the same league as Javelin

  • @hutzpa3619
    @hutzpa3619 Год назад +42

    You should review Stugna-P, it has unique design and had A LOT of kills and footage

    • @RTXpl
      @RTXpl Год назад +9

      because it's so simple to record video from Stugna-P screen but impossible to put cell phone camera inside Javellin vision system.

    • @nikitatarsov5172
      @nikitatarsov5172 Год назад +3

      But maybe this would colide with the prominent US opinion (and media statements) that nearly all tank destructions are results from glorious Javelins. Sounds like a lot of explanation-work to me that this isen't the case.

    • @nikitatarsov5172
      @nikitatarsov5172 Год назад

      @@mikes989 Yes i know the statistics.
      As i didn't want to get into detail, i just critisised the medial imbalancement and the warped perspective of interest groups.

    • @maximus7809
      @maximus7809 Год назад +2

      same shit made on Konkurs basis (as Kornet) but has a remote control and a screen, so the crew can stay in dugout. There's the same version for Kornet, but not in mass production

    • @maximus7809
      @maximus7809 Год назад +1

      @@nikitatarsov5172 80-90% of losses (human and equipment) is a result of an artillery work. All say it from both sides (Ukr and Ru)

  • @phillipyao4260
    @phillipyao4260 Год назад +1

    Cappy: The ridge wallet can block the kornet anti-tank missile

  • @josephsmith3908
    @josephsmith3908 Год назад

    Part of the jav and nlaw success is the tactics u can use the "shoot and scoot" w javs and nlaw

  • @nsierra2297
    @nsierra2297 Год назад +3

    You should do videos on obscure and middle weight militaries too. Very interesting subject which has very little coverage

  • @wild50gunner
    @wild50gunner Год назад +3

    I will say that while carrying a Kornet system looks pretty rough compared to the javelin shit is a dream compared to dismounted TOW operations.

  • @johndave117
    @johndave117 Год назад +4

    6:22 FALSE, the Kornet is a tandem warhead so it defeats ERA and composite armor on the M1 abrams, leopard 2, and challenger.

    • @voidtempering8700
      @voidtempering8700 Год назад +1

      Not entirely true, the Turret on the Abrams and Challengers turret, however, him saying the entire frontal arc is resistant is simply not true.

  • @korencek
    @korencek 2 месяца назад +2

    Russia now has tv guided atgms.

  • @theewatchfuleyeseesyou
    @theewatchfuleyeseesyou Год назад +7

    I don't really think that it makes much sense to compare the Javelin to the Kornet. They seem more of a heavy machine gun vs. light machine gun kind of situation, with the Kornet having to be set on a tripod and the Javelin being shoulder-mounted. It would make more sense to be compared to something like the Stugna or the Milan since you wouldn't be able to use the Kornet the same way you do with a Javelin. Also, no way they'd lie to us, they'd never.

  • @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88
    @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88 Год назад +5

    Thermobaric doesn't vacuum up the air or suck it out of your lungs. It uses the free oxygen in the atmosphere to detonate a fuel charge. This in turn displaces said oxygen with CO2 effectively smothering you, if the pressure wave doesn't kill you.

  • @mrphucyoo8281
    @mrphucyoo8281 Год назад

    This is more a better version of tow than almost equivelant to javelin! Beats me where some of these video posters are looking!

  • @BlackWater_49
    @BlackWater_49 Год назад

    5:42 What is that in military (metric) units aka Kilogrammes?

  • @RomanianReaver
    @RomanianReaver Год назад +6

    You made quite a few mistakes:
    1) NLAW/Javelin are more modern but in Ukraine it's been the Stugna system (which is very similar to the Kornet) that's been more deadly by a lot.
    2) The Abrams cheeks can resist a Kornet. Nothing else, the front hull plate and the chin would be woefully inadequate and the gun breach would be, at least, wrecked.
    3) Where'd you get the 2000 m/s number for the Javelin? Because at those sorts of speeds you're dealing with something going around Mach 5. That's a radically different beast in terms of design needs and any Jarhead can tell you that missile ain't mach capable on the shape alone (look at Zircon for a general idea of how you'd need to design a missile to not fly apart at high Mach speeds).
    4) Top attack is mostly a gimmick. It's not liable to hit anything vital unless it's a high yield weapon system (so a top attacking Kornet would by monstrous, a Javelin not so much, much lower yield by nearly 1/3).
    5) Didn't the US deplete, severely, its Javelin stockpile with 10-20k sent over to Ukraine? And it'll take Raytheon a few years to replenish the stocks.

    • @RomanianReaver
      @RomanianReaver Год назад

      @DefinitelyNotBrandon
      4) you're shooting a jet of molten shot into a tank from the top where most tanks have a massive crossection but everything in the tank tends to have a much lower crossection due to orientation. Unless it's lacking a spall liner (1950s - 1960s unmodernized) it won't do dick usually.
      5) It isn't but thank you for telling us you're to be ignored off brand Brandon.

  • @AHalz
    @AHalz Год назад +34

    Kornet missiles made their debut not in 2014, but much earlier in 2006 in Lebanon. Just a note that's all
    Second, the Israelis stated that an IDF bulldozer was hit by a Hezbullah Kornet at nearly 4 km (or 2.4 miles) away. Which is at the near max effective range of the missile
    The rumor about the Kornets being used in Iraq in 2003 has actually been just that...a rumor. Unless somebody can post sources, I poured over a plethora of sources online and couldn't find a single picture of a Kornet in Iraq, and there was no proof that a third party country ever transferred it to Iraq. The two knocked out Abrams and Bradley's were at first contributed to Kornets, but later reports I saw stated it was just RPG's that hit the more vulnerable areas of these vehicles. The only recorded instance of an ATGM actually being used in 2003 was a Milan missile fired at a British Challenger, but it didn't suffer much damage.
    Again, open to hear differently, but that's what I've read.

    • @Ukraineaissance2014
      @Ukraineaissance2014 Год назад

      From what I recall it was supposedly 2 Kornets used at once by republican guards against marines outside some city

    • @AHalz
      @AHalz Год назад

      @@Ukraineaissance2014 Yes, I read that report. I read a follow on report which stated 'sources' that claimed Iraq bought thousands of Kornets from Ukraine prior to the 2003 invasion.
      Obviously, that was false. There was no deal of that sort between Iraq and Ukraine, and on top of that, the Kornet didn't come into service until the 90s anyways, so Ukraine wouldn't have it.
      Besides that report, I didn't come across anything that hinted at Saddam's forces having Kornets.

    • @grandayatollah5655
      @grandayatollah5655 Год назад +3

      @@Ukraineaissance2014 Iraq never had Kornets, so it's fake. There's no recorded instances of ATGMs being used against US tanks in the invasion

    • @jeansansterre6908
      @jeansansterre6908 Год назад

      There is a Video of Abrahams being destroyed by kornet in Irak by ISS and One Leclerc in yemen

    • @AHalz
      @AHalz Год назад

      @@jeansansterre6908 yes, but the Kornets in those case came from the inventory of the former Syrian army which had thousands of them. Didn’t come from Saddam’s Arsenal

  • @skyrask1948
    @skyrask1948 Год назад

    Can i get source for that 2000km/s of delta v for Javelin. Since for missile with dry mass of over over 60% not even hydro-lox can get that much energy let alone solid state propellant.

  • @joshicune
    @joshicune Год назад +1

    Automatic loader is not feature of missile but vehicle. Javelin speed is lot smaller than presented. Javelin is different category of weapon, more for guerilla war. That worked well until Russians discovered that rules of engagement for tanks have to be followed.
    When you showed Kornet on Toyota, you should also show Kornet on Mi-28. Imagine Javelin on heli? Just to understand difference in categories.

  • @PitFriend1
    @PitFriend1 Год назад +19

    There’s another problem with an actively guided slow moving missile system like this, especially one that rides a laser beam. Modern tanks usually have a laser detection system so the crew will know if they’re getting lased either for ranging or for an ATGM. If the missile is being launched from 200 meters or so the tank could fire on the launch site with either the main gun or their machineguns. The gun rounds will reach the launcher before the missile reaches the target. Since the missile has no self guidance if the operator is killed or even flinches the missile will miss.
    The massive advantage of fire and forget missiles like the Javelin or NLAW is that once the missile is in the air shooting back at the launcher crew does nothing.

    • @jumpingoutofairplanesmentality
      @jumpingoutofairplanesmentality Год назад +1

      Sure javelins are great, unless you have automated vibranium fly swatters on your tank 🤷‍♂️ 🤜🚀

    • @Seth9809
      @Seth9809 Год назад

      Most serious users or operators, have been just aiming above the tank. Do not watch the videos?

    • @run2u520
      @run2u520 Год назад +1

      I think generally, the crew would pop smoke in whatever direction they were being lased from. This is because you never really know what is currently lasing you, it could either be a slow flying kornet missile or a tank about to put a sabot round through you. So I speculate that crews will usually pop smoke and reverse away rather than trying to hunt for whatever it was that was lasing them.

    • @gumby2241
      @gumby2241 8 месяцев назад

      Isn't it a simple matter to lase the target from a drone instead? Plus, why fire from 200 meters? tht would be suicide.

  • @Raul_Menendez
    @Raul_Menendez Год назад +5

    Spoilers: It isn't better, its the same as all ATGM.
    ATGMs poses a threat more to tanks than tank vs tank.

    • @minhtran7431
      @minhtran7431 Год назад

      could be better, soldiers fighting have complained about the lack of range of nlaw and javelin. Sometimes the tank are too far away

    • @Raul_Menendez
      @Raul_Menendez Год назад

      @@minhtran7431 Well thats the risk of it.
      And also the risk of a tank not having infantry support.
      Like how the current Russo-Ukraine conflict or US in Iraq.
      Sending tanks without proper infantry support spells disaster

  • @adomenaltas8693
    @adomenaltas8693 Год назад

    I want to know what will happen with the tank equipped with active protection system if 3-5 kornet fire on it together

  • @billwhoever2830
    @billwhoever2830 Год назад +1

    Video: velocity of the "javelin" is 2000m/s!
    Correction in comment: "javelin velocity is 583m/s sponsor...."
    Reality:
    FGM148 "Javelin": velocity is ~140m/s
    MANPAD "Javelin" missile from UK: max velocity is ~1.7mach (578.5m/s)
    "Javelin" used in olympic games: velocity aproaching 31.5m/s
    the end, javelin is a very slow, short range atgm that depends on top attack to attack a real tank
    the kornet is an extended range atgm, designed to OUTRANGE tank guns and to attack them head on
    different weapons, different uses, different cost, different effectiveness on different wars
    someone could easily say though that the kornet is a far more capable missile if you are dealing with big amounts of tanks
    the tanks wont even try to move in if they know kornets are operated on an area (especialy in wars in the dessert or in the open fields in Ukraine)

  • @ArchOfficial
    @ArchOfficial Год назад +13

    Should probably be comparing the 9M133 Kornet to the BGM-71E TOW-2A, seeing as they're more similar. Or maybe to the TOW-2B Aero if you care about the production date matching closer. Truth be told I'm not sure exactly what launcher and missile the US is realistically using right now, but surely some kind of TOW-2.

  • @joeblack5393
    @joeblack5393 Год назад +4

    My god dude.
    You have an enemy position.
    It doesnt even have to be armored target.
    Your combat troops make contact with said position and they *KNOW* that this position is there.
    This position consists of trenches and reinforced bunker like structures with heavy machine gun placements.
    They tell you about it.
    You are a kornet operator.
    You show up there.
    You pick a position which is way beyond the enemy's ability to spot you.
    Say 6 km with a direct line of sight.
    You fire a missile.
    -1 enemy reinforced firing position.
    This happens in Ukraine literally EVERY day.
    So yes, there are absolutely targets (static ones) that you can fire your missile at those 5km+ ranges.

    • @kubagra456
      @kubagra456 Год назад +2

      Do you have any media examples of such things taking place? Where in Ukraine can you find places where you have unobstructed +5km line of sight (no trees and all) and to make it better, place where you can take your time to set up such thing and use it? (ignoring fact that in such situations you'd probably want to have mortar or artillery piece, which both provite more firepower without need to expose yourself and shoot ~100k USD worth missile aganist max ~10k USD worth machinegun)

    • @pedrocosta6440
      @pedrocosta6440 Год назад +1

      @@kubagra456 Have you ever been to Ukrainia? It’s the flattest land you can imagine, it’s like the desert with grass….

    • @theimmortal4718
      @theimmortal4718 Год назад

      @@kubagra456
      You mean like every road and farmers field?
      It's an ATGM gunners dream

  • @-scgg-gg7938
    @-scgg-gg7938 Год назад

    thanks for the vid

  • @XYmp
    @XYmp Год назад

    M1A2 SEP V3, as estimated by Steven Zaloga.
    Turret front -
    960 mm (38 inches) vs APFSDS,
    1,320 - 1,620 mm ( 52 to 65 inches) vs HEAT
    Lower hull front -
    580 - 650 mm (23 to 26 inches) vs APFSDS,
    800 - 870 mm (32 to 35 inches) vs HEAT
    Glacis -
    560 - 590 mm (22 to 24 inches) vs APFSDS,
    510 - 1,050 mm (20 to 42 inches) vs HEAT
    The glacis is sloped at 82 degrees from the vertical.
    The relative armor protection for that inclination, for APFSDS rounds, is stated as 24 inches.
    If you reverse calculate the actual armor thickness, it turns out to be 3.3 inches at the most.
    Relative Armor Calculator
    This is likely accurate, as some sources say it has only two inches there.
    And that is ordinary hardened steel armor, not composite nor any depleted uranium.
    The first RPG-7 model to come out in the 60s penetrates 260 mm, or 10 inches of RHA.
    So if you use this and blast the M1's glacis from an upper floor or rooftop, it should go right through.
    Note that depleted uranium is used only on the front turret and hull.
    The turret sides likely have 16 inches composite, no depleted uranium.
    Inclined at 30 degrees from the vertical, that gives you a physical thickness of about 18 inches, against sabot rounds.
    If you take the usual estimate at 1.4 times more for HEAT rounds, that would be -
    18 x 1.4 = 25 inches
    An old Euromissile Milan should be able to penetrate that.
    So kornet is has no problem penetrating.

  • @jacknelson5987
    @jacknelson5987 Год назад +6

    Not a good argument, the jav still outclasses this on the fact of fire and forget… this is way more similar to tow missiles…

  • @jamilabdallah4086
    @jamilabdallah4086 8 месяцев назад +4

    Isn't the cornet used to destroy Merkava tanks?

  • @Blu0tuth0ninja
    @Blu0tuth0ninja 8 месяцев назад

    No missile system should be underestimated. While old school in its tech, I dont doubt it's effectiveness in taking out targets. Better to not give it the chance to fire at all.

  • @piotrd.4850
    @piotrd.4850 4 месяца назад +2

    Few people understand how and WHY country that build by far most tanks in the world and insane number of aircraft, also invested absurd amounts into plethora of anti-armour and air-defence systems. USSR fielded more types, families (not to mention - pieces) of ATGM than rest of the world put together. They hit the wall with one thing: IIR ccd.
    PS: usually combat debut of system is either total disaster or spectacular success - only later it settles to some plateu.

  • @Vixctor13
    @Vixctor13 Год назад +5

    Since Ukraine was invaded I've seen footage of the AT missile Stugna-P. Would be cool to hear your research on it.

    • @yaboyed5779
      @yaboyed5779 Год назад

      @@dylanwalker7624 so it’s their version of the Kornet?

  • @fleekrushyt9410
    @fleekrushyt9410 Год назад +3

    Can you talk about the stugna p?

  • @sheikbombalot5781
    @sheikbombalot5781 8 месяцев назад

    Kornet just took out the so called “undefeatable” Challenger 2 tank.
    Sounds like a first grade ATGM.

  • @Steven-bd1fv
    @Steven-bd1fv Год назад

    now that we got your javelin missiles, I don't think its gonna take long until we have the exact same thing being deployed by our forces LMAOOO

  • @alania8737
    @alania8737 Год назад +4

    I don't believe the speed of javelin is correct. 2000 meters/sec is like mach 6, which is even faster than APFSDS.

  • @johnanthony5393
    @johnanthony5393 7 месяцев назад +5

    They just took out a Challenger II with one 😛👌

  • @asd99579
    @asd99579 Год назад

    Were there any combats in Crimea?

  • @davidlisovtsev6607
    @davidlisovtsev6607 Год назад +1

    one overlooked factor for the Kornet is the reliability, I've alive today because it malfunctioned

    • @burnttoast111
      @burnttoast111 Год назад

      Lucky you! I think all ATGMs malfunction from time to time. I would think at different rates, probably complicated by not being stored or maintained properly.