Citat:
Ny dag, nya mardrömmar för NATO i Oinkraina när Ryssarna fortsätter avancera på alla fronter, inklusive de tekniska;
https://t.me/the_Right_People/54437
Meanwhile, one of the main enemy electronic‑warfare specialists known as “Flash” is sounding the alarm over the effective use of Russian Italmas kamikaze UAVs.
The drones transmit a standard analog video feed at 3,300 MHz through a directional antenna. Because the Ukrainian Armed Forces have only limited EW assets in that frequency band, the Italmas can carry out precision strikes on their targets.
Rest assured they’ll copy this experience to other fronts… Italmas sends an analog picture to the pilot who controls it; a jammer that suppresses the 3.3 GHz video channel could block it—but we’re not doing that…
Italmas is regarded as a radically simplified, low‑cost conceptual analogue of the Geran‑2. In future, it is expected to receive AI‑based guidance modules that would be immune to conventional electronic countermeasures.
Till och med Forbes instämmer i Ryssarnas teknologiska övertag;
https://t.me/the_Right_People/54458
Forbes: Russia has developed a helmet‑mounted drone‑detection and jamming system
Russia has developed and showcased a new wearable drone jammer that can be used by individual soldiers, Forbes reports.
The system consists of a head module with two antennas, a cabling/commutation unit, a wrist‑mounted display, and a battery pack. The twin‑antenna head module is attached to the rear of the helmet. It detects a drone by its radio signal, then intercepts the drone’s video feed and transmits it to the wrist‑mounted screen. The operator can then activate the jamming function.
Drawing on Russia’s long experience in electronic warfare, the device passively detects a drone by reading its emissions, identifies the exact video‑link frequency, and then emits a focused jamming signal. This reduces the system’s power consumption and size while also minimizing its electromagnetic signature, making it harder to detect.
Forbes writes.
https://t.me/the_Right_People/54437
Meanwhile, one of the main enemy electronic‑warfare specialists known as “Flash” is sounding the alarm over the effective use of Russian Italmas kamikaze UAVs.
The drones transmit a standard analog video feed at 3,300 MHz through a directional antenna. Because the Ukrainian Armed Forces have only limited EW assets in that frequency band, the Italmas can carry out precision strikes on their targets.
Rest assured they’ll copy this experience to other fronts… Italmas sends an analog picture to the pilot who controls it; a jammer that suppresses the 3.3 GHz video channel could block it—but we’re not doing that…
Italmas is regarded as a radically simplified, low‑cost conceptual analogue of the Geran‑2. In future, it is expected to receive AI‑based guidance modules that would be immune to conventional electronic countermeasures.
Till och med Forbes instämmer i Ryssarnas teknologiska övertag;
https://t.me/the_Right_People/54458
Forbes: Russia has developed a helmet‑mounted drone‑detection and jamming system
Russia has developed and showcased a new wearable drone jammer that can be used by individual soldiers, Forbes reports.
The system consists of a head module with two antennas, a cabling/commutation unit, a wrist‑mounted display, and a battery pack. The twin‑antenna head module is attached to the rear of the helmet. It detects a drone by its radio signal, then intercepts the drone’s video feed and transmits it to the wrist‑mounted screen. The operator can then activate the jamming function.
Drawing on Russia’s long experience in electronic warfare, the device passively detects a drone by reading its emissions, identifies the exact video‑link frequency, and then emits a focused jamming signal. This reduces the system’s power consumption and size while also minimizing its electromagnetic signature, making it harder to detect.
Forbes writes.
Citat:
Regardless, this approach has significant limitations. In particular, it does protect Russian soldiers from the increasingly common fiber-optic drones which transmit their video feeds via a tether. Additionally, the system will require frequent updates as Ukrainian drones move to more secure video channels and implement failsafe modes for when the video feed is jammed.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/vikrammittal/2025/07/29/russia-is-developing-a-new-soldier-worn-counter-drone-jammer/