danhite 6 hours ago

This IRL now is very much in the spirit of Mark Stiegler's 1990 humorous thought piece takedown of the $ inefficiency of the B-2 ~stealth bomber by proposing ~everyone buys chances to down one by any means possible.

There is a proper citation below, but you can enjoy this quick read at his dusty website here :

http://www.skyhunter.com/b2.htm

The B-2 Lottery · Marc Stiegler · published in New Destinies, Vol. IX/Fall 1990 ed. Jim Baen (Baen 0-671-2016-3, Sep ’90 [Aug ’90], $3.50, 286pp, pb, cover by David A. Hardy) Original anthology of eight stories plus six non-fiction pieces on space and technology.

cududa 16 hours ago

I wasn’t previously aware of Ukrainians flying drones directly into helicopter’s rotors, but that does make sense.

I obviously know very little about battlefield armaments so forgive the potentially stupid question - but have drones made combat helicopters obsolete?

  • general1726 15 hours ago

    That's like asking if bullets made infantry obsolete. As long as there is a role for attack helicopter on the battlefield, then it is not obsolete, just more vulnerable during its missions.

    • BoiledCabbage 12 hours ago

      > That's like asking if bullets made infantry obsolete

      You sure it's not asking if bullets made spears obsolete"?

  • tetromino_ 10 hours ago

    > have drones made combat helicopters obsolete?

    Which drones?

    Helicopters are vulnerable to small quadcopter drones when landing and taking off. This limits some traditional uses of helicopters (anything that involves landing in enemy territory becomes much more risky) but still leaves others (shooting missiles at surface targets).

    Helicopters are very effective at shooting down large fixed-wing drones.

    Helicopters are very effective at sinking drone boats without air defenses, but are in turn very vulnerable to drone boats equipped with SAMs.

potato3732842 13 hours ago

>Video emerging from the scene shows the helicopters slowly approaching a landing zone.

Bringing police tactics to an infantry fight will get you dead every time. Helicopters have always been sitting ducks dependent largely upon tactics to survive in even the most slightly unfriendly airspace.

It really is a marvel of modern technology that you can have a decent shot at defending yourself from a helicopter with something that costs under $1k and fits in a briefcase.

Ms-J 15 hours ago

Thankfully the era of large jets and helicopters is coming to an end. It will be nice to stop wasting so much on weak platforms.

A swarm of small drones is easily accessible by every regular Joe and can asymmetrically project more power.

  • kcb 15 hours ago

    Swarms of small drones aren't really a threat to large jets. Unless you're talking on the ground still. A drone capable enough to take on a jet is either something very similar to a missile or very expensive.

BXLE_1-1-BitIs1 10 hours ago

You don't need explosives to take down a helo,just a good enough length of strong rope with weights to put the rotors out of balance.

vardump 16 hours ago

The era of tanks, military troop transport vehicles and attack helicopters might be coming to an end.

Unless, of course, reliable countermeasures can be developed.

But due to cost imbalance, drones being so cheap, it doesn't look good for the military vehicles.

  • wredcoll 15 hours ago

    Drones are, by and large, the same thing as missiles.

    Those haven't made manned tanks obsolete yet.

    There's going to be value in having a human "on site" to make decisions about engaging targets for quite a while from now.

    • mediumsmart 8 hours ago

      I thought making a manned tank obsolete is the use case for a drone with the highest value possibly in deciding to trade it with an Abrams.

    • burnt-resistor 15 hours ago

      Drones are fundamentally better than subsonic-Mach 4 missiles because they're 100-1000x cheaper, several times smaller, have a much smaller RCS, and have loiter ability. They're slower and pack tiny warheads relatively, but they're key to taking out mobile forces and other drones.

      For fixed targets, that's something artillery and Shahed-like cruise "missiles" can deal with.

      • digitalPhonix 13 hours ago

        > subsonic-Mach 4

        How is it subsonic and mach 4?

        • aspenmayer 13 hours ago

          I interpreted it as a range of missiles, with subsonic on the low speed end, and Mach 4 on the high speed end.

  • probablyabot 13 hours ago

    Microwave arrays seem like a pretty effective countermeasure to drones. Not for jamming, for frying the actual circuits. Look up the Epirus Leonidas.

  • burnt-resistor 15 hours ago

    Lighter, faster, smaller, more numerous, and more mobile vehicles might make sense because the era of the slow moving castles near the front on land, sea, and air seems about dead.

    Drones of all sorts out front with more numerous "ripsaw"-like vehicles with shoot-on-the-move mobile artillery (RCH 155) and air defense (AAA like Skyranger 30 and SAM like M-SHORAD) just behind.