Why did Russia say it doesn't make sense for it to buy T-14 tanks?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • This video explains the nuances of Russian official’s statements concerning the production of the future T-14 tank. It puts the whole issue of T-14’s production in proper context, drawing a comparison with US Abrams production news. And explore the issue of tank usage on future battlefields.
    00:00 Intro to topic
    01:06 Production history
    06:22 War scuttled plans
    07:53 What now?
    Link to our Abrams video:
    • M1A3 Abrams is finally...
    Music by Matija Malatestinic www.malatestinic.com
    If you want to watch our videos without ads, if you want quick replies to any questions you might have, if you want early access scripts and videos, monthly release schedules - become our Patron.
    More here: / binkov
    You can also browse for other Binkov merch, like T-Shirts, via the store at our website, binkov.com
    Subscribe to Binkov's channel for more videos! / @binkov
    Follow Binkov's news on Facebook! / binkovsbattlegrounds
    Follow us on Twitter: / commissarbinkov

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @JinKee
    @JinKee Před 18 dny +173

    friendship ended with T-14 armata.
    turtle tank is new best tank now.

  • @P3RF3CTD3ATH
    @P3RF3CTD3ATH Před 17 dny +70

    The Turtle Tank is the future of tanks.

    • @kxng_k0Ng_
      @kxng_k0Ng_ Před 17 dny +2

      It’s for fpvs there’s vids of some taking 3 hits and kept going also they did a reconnaissance in force to find Ukraine positions in the vid it kept going and u see a grenade launcher being shot at it it did nothing it kept going and there was 1 with mine clearing equipment and it got tracked the Russians got it and repaired it.

    • @kxng_k0Ng_
      @kxng_k0Ng_ Před 17 dny +2

      There all different some look bad ass with chains and fat ammo boxes and so on. The vid is nasty the Ukraines kept trying to hit em and it kept going large scale combined arms positional warfare in Europe and its 30% modern footholds strongholds defensive belts military fortifications all types of trenches dougouts fox holes high ground low ground Russia hits concentration of forces and temporary positions in the front and rear all the time Ukraine only gets lil pricks Yk Ukraine doesn’t have fabs aviation bombs they don’t even have military kamikaze drones with war heads just military reconnaissance drones all regular drones fpvs drones boats and so on.

    • @kxng_k0Ng_
      @kxng_k0Ng_ Před 17 dny

      They Germans fought harder in ww2 they had the weaponry Ukraine doesn’t they got what they got and get what they get.☠️

    • @sirwhitemeat9785
      @sirwhitemeat9785 Před 17 dny

      @@kxng_k0Ng_ you love putin

    • @John_Brian-qu5eq
      @John_Brian-qu5eq Před 17 dny

      ​​While i appreciate your support of russia, you are wrong about the level of tech that is available to the Ukrainians ​@@kxng_k0Ng_

  • @tommywolfe2706
    @tommywolfe2706 Před 18 dny +46

    A few years ago one of our senior military officials said that our stuff is obsolete because if the Chinese really wanted to, they could just swarm us with drones by the thousands.
    I think the Russians are learning that throwing your best tanks into a place where a cheap drone can take them out is not the best move.
    We have witnessed a shift in how wars are fought. Its crazy to think that armored soldiers were on the battlefield for thousands of years, even after gunpowder and the tank would be the ultimate version of that armor, but its barely lasted 100 years as an effective tool.

    • @Tonius126
      @Tonius126 Před 18 dny +16

      There is no alternative to tanks as an mobile fire support plantform. Aardvark wipe out 80% of iraqs armor and tanks were never said to be obsolete then.
      Russia lacks the advanced EW system due to advance chips and semi cinducters sanctions to cover all their armor.

    • @currawong60911368
      @currawong60911368 Před 18 dny +3

      Every measure has a countermeasure. Things will remain largely the same. Tanks, aircraft, ships have all been considered obsolete and yet here we are. All have counter measures, and so measures to counter the countermeasures and so on.

    • @tomvlodek6377
      @tomvlodek6377 Před 14 dny

      @@Tonius126 wrong, they have their own semiconductor industry and make some of the most advanced systems in the world with indigenously produced components, nice try at coping though 😂

    • @soloqueuepixy
      @soloqueuepixy Před 13 dny

      lol no. cheap and light drones are blind and weak drones. they're only prevalent because the frontlines are barely moving, and the frontlines are barely moving because neither side has a way to effectively bypass the world war 1 artillery contest. this is because the russian air force is limited to lobbing glide bombs at stationary targets from the safety of friendly airspace, and the ukrainian air force barely exists. this is not a problem faced by the US air force, which proved even thirty years ago that it could do much more than that.

    • @soloqueuepixy
      @soloqueuepixy Před 13 dny

      ​@@tomvlodek6377 the country whose air force got caught upgrading their navigation to use basic civilian GPS lmao

  • @gobomanaga5615
    @gobomanaga5615 Před 18 dny +36

    Retooling factories currently producing T90's probably just isn't worth it.

    • @shuathe2nd
      @shuathe2nd Před 18 dny +1

      Is it a T-90 if it doesn't have night vision and thermal sights bought from western companies? Isn't it just a T-72 at that point?

    • @gobomanaga5615
      @gobomanaga5615 Před 18 dny +15

      @@shuathe2nd Russia produces its' own night vision both for tanks and infantry, Russians are second only to the US in night vision technology, and the US has explicitly banned selling any US night vision to foreign states.

    • @alexnderrrthewoke4479
      @alexnderrrthewoke4479 Před 18 dny +9

      @@shuathe2nd look nafo bot will you stop lying? Its getting old

    • @jonny2954
      @jonny2954 Před 18 dny +3

      @@gobomanaga5615 Do you know the difference between image intensifier and thermal imager? Modern AFVs don't even have image intensifiers anymore, they run thermals only. Russia still can not mass produce thermal imagers, even the ones reverse engineered from western ones.

    • @shuathe2nd
      @shuathe2nd Před 18 dny

      @@alexnderrrthewoke4479 truth hurt snowflake? russia is taking a battering, and putin is turning it into north korea - if you like that then good for you, but clearly you don't like russian people if you want that fate for them.

  • @SnazBrigade
    @SnazBrigade Před 18 dny +49

    it would be funny if the T-14 ends up being changed substantially and then like the ak-12, the only place the original design exists is in a Battlefield game

    • @Mwwwwwwwwe
      @Mwwwwwwwwe Před 18 dny +1

      Welcome to the new soviet union...Been watching a lot of"paper skies" chanel recently and a common soviet theme is if it doesn't work, fake test results or push it into serial production and fix it with hundreds of upgrades. Or arrest everyone involved in the project for treason. That's what happens when a government sets unreasonable goals and expects delivery on a certain day no matter what

    • @DaBestEmperor
      @DaBestEmperor Před 18 dny

      I think that is likely going to be the case, tbh.

    • @rfak7696
      @rfak7696 Před 18 dny

      ​@@Mwwwwwwwwe So, running a nation like a tech company?

    • @mitchconner403
      @mitchconner403 Před 15 dny

      Nah, they would probably just put a tool shed on top of the tank, and call it a day.

    • @02suraditpengsaeng41
      @02suraditpengsaeng41 Před dnem

      Can't wait in WarT hunder with magic no spall armor and no exploded ammo (spall liner isn't bad enough)

  • @Postoronniy
    @Postoronniy Před 18 dny +19

    Retooling the UVZ factory for full-scale T-14 production would mean stopping it for a year or more. This is unacceptable during wartime. The Armed Forces need continuous inflow of new/modernised/reactivated tanks to compensate for losses and to equip new units, which means that production of currently ready model (i.e. T-90M) must be ramped up.
    Meanwhile, the design of object 148 can be updated or possibly reworked, accounting for the experience gained during the combat operations of the current war.

    • @Legion617
      @Legion617 Před 16 dny

      They literally had nearly a decade to completely overhaul UVZ for the production of T-14s, without ANY war, and STILL haven't set up production. It's a dead end.

  • @169Mulek
    @169Mulek Před 14 dny +24

    Turtle tank > t14

  • @yarnickgoovaerts
    @yarnickgoovaerts Před 18 dny +67

    Jeez the amount of bots in this comment section is insane

    • @aurex8937
      @aurex8937 Před 18 dny +7

      Weird, I only saw bots from one side, and it's probably not the one you're referring to.

    • @tetispinkman9135
      @tetispinkman9135 Před 18 dny

      That's why I don't really read comment any more.

    • @madbean3532
      @madbean3532 Před 18 dny +4

      Well, afterall, the nature of the internet - it has also bring all those conflicts in reality to zero distance. There's no Eden in the present day internet anymore, tainted by the nature of mankind.
      Ahh yes, don't mind my weird talk. It's just everything has been a bit too depressing....

    • @yarnickgoovaerts
      @yarnickgoovaerts Před 18 dny +1

      @@aurex8937 what side do you think I’m referring to?

    • @plebius
      @plebius Před 18 dny +3

      Beep boop beep

  • @rahimoneill7294
    @rahimoneill7294 Před 18 dny +51

    If Ukraine is the problem, then T14 is NOT the answer. Think this war will change a lot of views on what defines good equipment in a real war.

    • @user-kc9nf5yq8n
      @user-kc9nf5yq8n Před 18 dny +5

      вот верный взгляд, и сейчас рулят Цари-Мангалы

    • @thomashaapalainen4108
      @thomashaapalainen4108 Před 18 dny +3

      ​@@user-kc9nf5yq8naudible fart noise .

    • @greenling.
      @greenling. Před 17 dny +1

      If one believes that wars between major countries will be fought with either almost no airforce and fleet or with incapable ones and Artillery-shelling as method of advancement then... well maybe...

    • @anthonykaiser974
      @anthonykaiser974 Před 17 dny

      ​@@greenling.True, but ubiquitous drone surveillance and attacks have definitely changed how the game has to be played. Any major tactical level mistakes can be detected and taken advantage of so much more easily, for example, at least without good deception and EW plans.

    • @gamingrex2930
      @gamingrex2930 Před 17 dny

      This war will change a lot of views on what defines good equipment FOR this type of war.
      You're suggesting every new battle field will be another ukraine, lowlands interspersed with urban centres and a single branching highway. Or the fact that tanks will even be used in their current roles for future war.

  • @yutakago1736
    @yutakago1736 Před 17 dny +11

    A good weapon need to be cost effective. If the cost of one latest tank = 10 older tanks. It is difficult to replace the losses in the battle field.

  • @ADobbin1
    @ADobbin1 Před 16 dny +22

    For the same reason the US hasn't bought half the weapons systems its developed over the decades. The new stuff usually doesn't do anything the old one can't do for less money and in the mean time some of the stuff on the new one gets put on the old one as upgrades. In the case of a tank a hull doesn't go obsolete, its just a hull. Put a new turret on it or an upgraded turret on and its technically a brand new tank. Just looks at the turkish M60's.

    • @SiyasiMunafucksavar
      @SiyasiMunafucksavar Před 16 dny +2

      Katılıyorum. Günümüzde tank fiyatları uçmuş durumda. (3×Tank = 1×F16) Bu resmen çılgınlık. En iyisi eldeki tankları modernize etmek.

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 Před 15 dny

      @@SiyasiMunafucksavar Not really. Tank prices have gotten pretty cheap relative to aircraft costs.
      Especially the Abrams considering how old/mature the design is.
      They play on this alot considering how NATO switched from expensive MBT's to faster/cheaper LAVs and Strykers.

    • @Zack_Wester
      @Zack_Wester Před 15 dny

      @@honkhonk8009 plus the us is only building new M1 tanks at the lowest number to keep the factory and staff in support.
      had the US sensed a war soon and gov been United on that US could easily ramp upp production and lower the cost of per tank.
      would the cost per year be more or less or equal I dont remember.

  • @VaughanDee93
    @VaughanDee93 Před 18 dny +15

    Cheap drones are so OP it makes sense just to spam buy them and artillery

  • @WSOJ3
    @WSOJ3 Před 17 dny +15

    Because a T90M reinforced with a turtle shell paired with an RC drone easily beats T14, and costs a lot less.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 Před 5 dny +1

      The turtle shells were a stopgap measure which doesn't work against artillery they were only good During the period that Republicans denied Ukraine artillery shells.

  • @dzoniii
    @dzoniii Před 18 dny +22

    Its really simple. 10 Million dollars tanks get blown up same as 1 Million dollars tanks with drones and land mines. There is no point in making 10 Mill dollars tank when u can get 10 others easier and faster for same price.

    • @kyb5203
      @kyb5203 Před 18 dny +3

      I think that is a very one dimensional way to think of equipment design. The cheaper tank may be a cheaper loss, but it will inevitably be lost at a higher rate. Secondly, a cheaper tank would not be able perform well under ideal conditions, as in a cheap tank that breaks through a defensive line wouldn’t be able to take as much ground as a high quality tank if it broke through defensive lines.

    • @Thanatos833
      @Thanatos833 Před 18 dny +1

      Sounds like a classically Russian approach, quantity > quality, which can be useful at time, as it was vs the Germans in WW2

  • @comradeblin256
    @comradeblin256 Před 17 dny +13

    Long story short, turning T72 to become a mobile shed gave better and more reliable (and MUCH cheaper) protection against drones and artillery compared to any "Active Protection System" available in existence.

    •  Před 17 dny

      Really? They go pop just like all the others...

    • @comradeblin256
      @comradeblin256 Před 17 dny

      The tutel does not go pop, it just burn like leopard and abrams do.
      Its funny considering making a tank to a mobile shed increase its survivability.

    • @nikolaideianov5092
      @nikolaideianov5092 Před 17 dny

      ​​@@comradeblin256when even buildings are running awey from russia

    • @LunaticTheCat
      @LunaticTheCat Před 17 dny

      Available in Russia, not "existence." You have no clue what type of classified systems the US and/or allies may be working on right now.

    • @tomvlodek6377
      @tomvlodek6377 Před 14 dny

      @@LunaticTheCat and you have no idea what they are working on either

  • @stevesmith7839
    @stevesmith7839 Před 16 dny +13

    I agree. Cost per loss makes ground war prohibitive for tanks. Any infantry soldier can carry a shoulder mounted missile that will destroy any tank. Those missiles cost far less than tanks, and any vehicle can carry several of those missiles. Tanks are slow and consume huge quantities of fuel making supply chains more difficult to fulfill. Tanks are huge, easy targets making their crews sitting ducks. Mine fields are effective in preventing the movement of tanks. Missiles will continue to get cheaper and better where tanks have reached their performative threshold. Baring the ability to make tanks fly and use nuclear fuel, tanks are a dead end. Robot tanks won't cost crews, but they will still be susceptible to mines and missiles and aircraft, and they will be expensive for the foreseeable future. Robot tanks will have vulnerabilities because they won't have environmental awareness that a present human will have. When a mag-mine attaches to the bottom of the robot tank, it won't hesitate to bring that mine with it to the refueling depot or the remote operator's location.

  • @armychowmein8021
    @armychowmein8021 Před 18 dny +15

    The comment section here: All wars are fought exactly the same and so the only tank that is any good is XYZ. I know this because I''m a youtube commentor.

  • @macmcleod1188
    @macmcleod1188 Před 18 dny +11

    The t14 relied on Western components. Sanctions ended that.
    The same thing applies to the Moscow. That flagship had a hundred million dollars worth of western electronics in it.
    There would have been more, however the sanctions from the 2014 Crimean Invasion blocked purchases during the 2019 refit.

    • @Wlad-nc9ys
      @Wlad-nc9ys Před 18 dny +1

      Сколько вы ребята будите еще смешить со своими промытыми мозгами. Ваша пропаганда делает же вам плохо . В Т-14 нет и не было ни одного западного комплектующего. Тепловизоры свои , вся электроника своя у нас. Мы восстановили лучшую в мире советскую электронику. Санкции только делают сильнее нас и развивают нашу экономику. Не смешите нас вашей пропагандой, потому что вас уже жалко становится. 😂

    • @user-bk6gx7sg3j
      @user-bk6gx7sg3j Před 18 dny +5

      That is a lie

    • @Devil_Dog_98
      @Devil_Dog_98 Před 18 dny +1

      @@Wlad-nc9ysJoin the army, Ivan. Your country needs you.

    • @Wlad-nc9ys
      @Wlad-nc9ys Před 18 dny +2

      @@Devil_Dog_98 не переживай , у нас достаточно армии на фронте, чтобы выкинуть нато из украины навсегда. Ждем тебя в наёмниках. И да, наемников в плен мы не берем. 😉

    • @Devil_Dog_98
      @Devil_Dog_98 Před 18 dny +3

      @@Wlad-nc9ys Oh no, but that don’t matter Ivan! Mother Russia is calling! You need to get back and answer the call!😉

  • @dgart7434
    @dgart7434 Před 18 dny +13

    Without a major international buyer like Turkey, India, or Egypt I can't see Russia ever mass producing the T-14.

    • @alexnderrrthewoke4479
      @alexnderrrthewoke4479 Před 18 dny

      Low iq comment but somehow it produces tanks in mass for all other models. Make that make sense 😂😂

    • @avarion9538
      @avarion9538 Před 18 dny +8

      They can't massproduce it, because the engine is terrible. It fails all the time, and they constructed and developed the tank around the engine, so they can't just use another engine. That means, the whole program failed. In average, the tank has problems every 40km or 25 miles, and needs specialists to fix it, so the thing is useless.

    • @sH-ed5yf
      @sH-ed5yf Před 18 dny +2

      ​​@@alexnderrrthewoke4479we talk about the t14. And in fact it is not mass produced. He is right about that...

    • @ailinofaolin8897
      @ailinofaolin8897 Před 18 dny +9

      @avarion9538 So you watched lazerpigs shitpost video on the T14 and now you're an expert on that tank and how often it breaks down, in Ireland we call this shitetalk of the highest order.

    • @alexnderrrthewoke4479
      @alexnderrrthewoke4479 Před 18 dny

      @@sH-ed5yf not yet and again if you use laserpig as your source then you need to go to a therapy session. Seriously

  • @TheBigExclusive
    @TheBigExclusive Před 4 dny +5

    Drones changed warfare. What's the point of making a super expensive tank when a Drone can destroy it in one shot?

  • @privatebandana
    @privatebandana Před 18 dny +10

    The new T-90 breakthrough tank Russia developed costs them between $1.5-2.5m, considering Russia has bolstered their own factories for mass production, we can assume it's under $2m per unit. That's 4 T-90 breakthrough tanks for every T-14, not to mention it takes much longer to produce the T-14 armata even if it enters mass production.
    So yeah it makes zero sense for Russia to go with the armata platform, ESPECIALLY in the type of modern conflict we have witnessed taking place in Ukraine. Remember, the armata platform was planned and design way before this war even started.. it would work amazing in small proxy wars around Africa and the Middle East, but in Ukraine where both sides has all kinds top-tier anti-tank options? Hell no.

    • @mspicer3262
      @mspicer3262 Před 18 dny +2

      the T-90M runs about $4.5mil per unit, half the expected initial unit cost of $9mil per unit for the T-14.

    • @Chris-zr3to
      @Chris-zr3to Před 18 dny +3

      Except you lose the crew when a T90 gets hit. In theory the T14 crew would survive. Easier to replace tanks then it is experienced crews

    • @irrelevantchannel200
      @irrelevantchannel200 Před 18 dny

      BMPT terminator preformed better than the older BMP models with higher survivability it uses same Armata platform I think so idk

    • @mspicer3262
      @mspicer3262 Před 18 dny +1

      @@Chris-zr3to it definitely costs less than $4.5 million to replace the 3-man crew. russian crews don't get much training, so it makes no sense to ensure their survival. that still makes the T-90 the better option, economically.

    • @Chris-zr3to
      @Chris-zr3to Před 18 dny +3

      @@mspicer3262 maybe but it is hard to put a price on battlefield experience

  • @nonyabisness6306
    @nonyabisness6306 Před 18 dny +6

    we kinda do this too.
    generally no one makes their entire fleet the most modern tank. it's just so expensive.

  • @Chiller11
    @Chiller11 Před 18 dny +8

    I don’t think Russia will be in any financial position after this war to think about expensive advancements in weapons technologies. War is an exhaustively expensive undertaking regardless of the country and Russia was not in particularly strong economic shape before the war. They are on track to allot 35% of all government spending toward the war in 2024. That’s a lot of domestic services and infrastructure that won’t be addressed.

    • @vp5209
      @vp5209 Před 17 dny

      @@Simeon301091and here come long-range Ukrainian drones. How many Russian oil refineries dis they hit last month?

    • @user-ru6yl9zr2z
      @user-ru6yl9zr2z Před 15 dny

      ​@vp5209 and what it do to the front? Nothing.

    • @tomvlodek6377
      @tomvlodek6377 Před 12 dny

      @@vp5209 who cares, ukraine won’t exist in 2025 😂

    • @tomvlodek6377
      @tomvlodek6377 Před 12 dny

      @@user-ru6yl9zr2z nothing 😂

    • @tomvlodek6377
      @tomvlodek6377 Před 12 dny

      @@user-ru6yl9zr2z it’ll help him cope 😂

  • @Therealwanderingyooper
    @Therealwanderingyooper Před 14 dny +21

    T14 was only ever a parade tank. Tested in Syria and no one saw it. Sounds like another joke

    • @messier8379
      @messier8379 Před 12 dny +6

      just like your Overhyped Challegner2 that got its Turret Tossed in Robotyne by a single Krasnopol hit

    • @arghost9798
      @arghost9798 Před 11 dny

      ​@messier8379 and afraid to appear in the frontline again ever since

  • @Rumbler298
    @Rumbler298 Před 18 dny +42

    Why buy T-14 when you can buy more Blyatmobile?🤣

  • @stevenjones916
    @stevenjones916 Před 16 dny +15

    Lots of tanks that are "good enough" are better than one "super tank". Hopefully the UK's MOD get the message also.

  • @1337user
    @1337user Před 17 dny +24

    Turtle tank is the new meta! 😂
    T14 is already obsolescent! ❤

    • @ataksnajpera
      @ataksnajpera Před 17 dny +4

      From modern T14 to Mad MaX style shack.

    • @tomvlodek6377
      @tomvlodek6377 Před 16 dny

      And so is the challenger, panther and overhyped abrams

    • @ataksnajpera
      @ataksnajpera Před 16 dny +3

      @@tomvlodek6377 Ukraine got the oldest Abrams available M1A1 from 80s. USA is not stupid to send the best ones to some random country.

    • @user-ru6yl9zr2z
      @user-ru6yl9zr2z Před 15 dny +2

      ​@ataksnajpera main difference of old and new abrams is secret armor. But side strikes with drones and artillery will still destroy both

    • @ataksnajpera
      @ataksnajpera Před 15 dny +1

      @@user-ru6yl9zr2z most likely you will be able to only destroy tracks. Latest version of Abrams are much more difficult to destroy. One Abrams in Irak got hit 7 times by RPG and was still working.

  • @hermes667
    @hermes667 Před 17 dny +14

    In a war economy prices do not matter much, unless you can´t get hands on the ressources.
    And there we are: Russia does not get the high tech needed for such a tank and therefore simply can´t produce this tank. Also: this tank is pure crap and they know it. So they use other excusses for not producing it.

    • @Australiaisupsidedown
      @Australiaisupsidedown Před 17 dny

      Yep!

    • @jade7631
      @jade7631 Před 17 dny +5

      That is suggesting tanks like the Abrams X is bad because they aren’t producing it. It could just mean it is to expensive, unnecessary, or simply takes to long to build. It was originally a technology demonstrator.

    • @elig3671
      @elig3671 Před 16 dny

      ​@@jade7631Abrams x is on another level, pact with innovative tech like giving the crew the ability to see through and around the tank like an f35 pilot. While the t14 is just trying to be a regular modern abrams and failing.

    • @hermes667
      @hermes667 Před 16 dny

      @@jade7631 no. The Abrams is a fine tank, the T-14 is crap. But the Russians won´t get far with reverse engineering on captured Abrams tanks. They had good scientists and engineers, but their industry lacks the abilities.
      It is one thing to know how something works and another thing to produce it in a useable quality and quantity.

    • @jade7631
      @jade7631 Před 16 dny

      @@elig3671 Abrams X is a technology demonstrator. It will not be ready for at least half a decade. The T-14 was already in slow production. T-14 if matches what was speculated, out preforms the Abrams by a lot. We have already confirmed that a stripped down M1A2 can be killed with just a T-72B3M, and the T-14 was engineered to counter what the best the west has to offer. T-14 exist, while the Abrams X doesn’t.

  • @dhanu_4539
    @dhanu_4539 Před 16 dny +19

    Turtle tanks are the future!!

  • @greebfewatani
    @greebfewatani Před 18 dny +5

    No army in their sensible mind will develop new tank before find a solution for the new threat.
    Ukrainian deployed some Abrams and it showed that even the Frontline western tanks facing big tactical issues with the new technology of drones and transparent battlefields

  • @SuwinTzi
    @SuwinTzi Před 18 dny +6

    What some commenter overlook is that retooling factories for mass production also drives up initial cost and hampers logistics

  • @antoniozeros
    @antoniozeros Před 17 dny +15

    They never existed past the prototype rofl

    • @ACR909
      @ACR909 Před 17 dny

      I guess you've not seem them in parades?

    • @grovsmed4347
      @grovsmed4347 Před 17 dny +6

      @@ACR909 weve seen the prototype yea. or would you send a extremly expensive tank to the front which even breaks down on a parade?

    • @bigmanrobert3610
      @bigmanrobert3610 Před 7 dny

      @@grovsmed4347 it didnt break down, can people stop repeating this lie its so stupid

  • @ycplum7062
    @ycplum7062 Před 18 dny +6

    Russia needs other countries to buy the T-14 to reduce the per unit costs through economy of scale before Russia they themselves can afford to buy them. Same with their fighter aircraft.

  • @willcchiwill8836
    @willcchiwill8836 Před 18 dny +13

    Any question about the modern Russian military can usually be answered by "they can't afford it" or "they don't have the capacity to build enough"

    • @5gurus-bimiseveriz
      @5gurus-bimiseveriz Před 11 hodinami

      Yeah obviously lol, that’s what happens when you aren’t spending 800 billion dollars on “defense” (certified US of A moment) 😂😂😂

  • @jackcrisci2957
    @jackcrisci2957 Před 17 dny +15

    Because almost every tank since the T-72...has been a T-72 with DLC.

    • @DollyRanch
      @DollyRanch Před 17 dny

      But the t-80 exists?

    • @zlamas997
      @zlamas997 Před 17 dny +2

      @@DollyRanchoveral design principle is the same with t-80, there are major differences with autolader and engine but overall it’s t-72 on steroids.

    • @DollyRanch
      @DollyRanch Před 17 dny

      @@zlamas997 the hull is also different

    • @vp5209
      @vp5209 Před 17 dny +5

      T-90 is an upgrade of T-72, T-80 is an upgrade of T-64, while T-72 is an upgrade of T-64

    • @eminence_
      @eminence_ Před 16 dny

      @@vp5209 T-72 is in many ways worse than modernized T-64. Get your facts straight. Reason why all countries are modifying T-72 is that because it sucks.

  • @johnnykrauze
    @johnnykrauze Před 18 dny +5

    Tanks are a layer of weapon. Just like other weapons. No one weapon is the king of weapons. There is a counter weapon for every weapon.

  • @damjanforjanic
    @damjanforjanic Před 17 dny +7

    I think time has stopped for the production of new tanks for everyone until they find a way to protect the tank from drones.

    • @garethmartin6522
      @garethmartin6522 Před 17 dny

      Yes exactly. Also the ubiquity of ATGM's. Heavy armour just doesn't work any more.

    • @LunaticTheCat
      @LunaticTheCat Před 17 dny +1

      Although that may be true, that's not the reason Russia isn't procuring any T-14s

  • @sichere
    @sichere Před 18 dny +14

    Russia decides to cancel building the invincible T14 and concentrate on reintroducing T55's for year 3 of their 3 day SMO

    • @cruise_missile8387
      @cruise_missile8387 Před 18 dny +1

      When javelins will take out ANY of them equally well you use tanks primarily for things other than MBT on MMBT combat you might as well just slap some cheap upgrades on old ones and save money.

    • @Nottotti-eg9nf
      @Nottotti-eg9nf Před 18 dny +2

      3 day SMO? Said by who exactly? Cause I can't recall any Russian Officials saying such a line. It's almost as if that statement was made by an American General called General Milley. Cut it with the bs propaganda, it doesn't look good on you and plus it won't work on people who have 2 braincells that they can use to connect the dots.

  • @aitorbleda8267
    @aitorbleda8267 Před 11 dny +7

    It needs to defend itself from drones, it makes no sense to build it otherwise

  • @Texo333
    @Texo333 Před 18 dny +7

    tanks will not for long be so easy to kill. The drone problem will be solved soon. Active protection systems like iron first or Trophy will solve this. Artillery and mines will always remain a problem but thats the case for all

  • @christineshotton824
    @christineshotton824 Před 18 dny +4

    Ask not what you can do to the tank; ask what the tank can do to you.

  • @sylvainprigent6234
    @sylvainprigent6234 Před 8 dny +4

    Because the t14 is a good tank on paper only and it hasn't all the glorious capabilities that the sales pitch claim.
    And when in the real world of a real war, the sales pitch counts for nothing compared to the reality of high explosive anti tank weapons.

  • @NothingIsKnown00
    @NothingIsKnown00 Před 17 dny +5

    In general, during peace time it makes sense to produce your most advanced stuff. During war time it makes more sense to produce your simpler, more reliable equipment. Especially if your most modern equipment is shit.

  • @ffx_6751
    @ffx_6751 Před 18 dny +5

    Well, yeah, it's kinda painful to manufacture a multi million dollar tank which can be destroyed by a 100$ drone.

  • @KyleFromSouthParkCA
    @KyleFromSouthParkCA Před 15 dny +13

    Its called the T-14 because it was supposed to come out in 2014

  • @Soldner41
    @Soldner41 Před 15 dny +7

    Aslong an FPV Drone Costs like 200$ it doesnt matter how High Tech and expensive my Tank is aslong it isnt able to defend itself against these drones.
    I think, many countries currently overthink how they can counter the newly discovered threat.
    As for the Russians, currently, its smarter to buy/produce cheaper Tanks as they can do the same but for a smaller cost.

    • @user-lz1yb6qk3f
      @user-lz1yb6qk3f Před 15 dny +3

      Agreed. Old design concepts does not make sense on today battlefield. We need to return to the drawing board and come up with something that will penetrate modern defences.

    • @aynersolderingworks7009
      @aynersolderingworks7009 Před 14 dny

      Tanks just need mounted AA guns, so the MGturrets will likely become autocannons turrets with a lot of automation to detect and shoot small drones

    • @PeterMuskrat6968
      @PeterMuskrat6968 Před 14 dny

      Ahh, another person that doesnt understand the "race" part of an arms race.
      Electronic Warfare will get better, and already has, and those cheap drones will not be useful anymore.
      It's already starting, with drones being increasingly lost before they could be used because the EW jams them.

  • @johnso2399
    @johnso2399 Před 14 dny +12

    when flying stealth shovels and nuclear powered washing machine can do that work, why do Russian still need T14?

  • @TotalRookie_LV
    @TotalRookie_LV Před 15 dny +6

    T-14 was also too big for existing facilities - just doesn't fit in storage and repair boxes built for Soviet tanks.
    So the saga ended by not choosing T-14, not even T-90, instead T-72B3 was picked as Russian standard MBT.

    • @eddgar-ce3md
      @eddgar-ce3md Před 15 dny +2

      It was never meant for production anyway. They couldn't even make the X engine work, which is based on an old Austrian design, that no one used, because it doesn't work in a tank. While it looks great on paper, the engine is too complicated, requires a lot of maintenance and the cooling is a nightmare.
      They designed the hull around the engine. With a new engine, they have to redesign the hull. The tank is already too big, with a V engine, it will only get longer and heavier.
      And that's just one of the many issues the tank has.

  • @tiagodagostini
    @tiagodagostini Před 13 dny +10

    In modern battlefield a TOP of line tank dies as easily as a T55. That mean it is nto worth to invest in expensive tanks.

    • @triage2962
      @triage2962 Před 10 dny

      Yes and the T14 is literally the Russian version of a western Tank.

  • @2IDSGT
    @2IDSGT Před 18 dny +5

    The loitering/top-attack munitions problem needs to be mitigated before any more tanks are designed… 🙄

  • @Alister.95
    @Alister.95 Před 17 dny +7

    "Test Batch" ---> Testing whether the procedures for syphoning money into private overseas bank accounts are sufficiently robust. (The Test was Successful).

  • @ricdond
    @ricdond Před 18 dny +17

    next gen tanks will need major anti-drone capabilities, significant top armor improvements, be unmanned or have a very snall crew, have hardened sensors that survive precision artillery and auto cannon fire, and have capabilities that allow them to spot for indirect fire rapidly and accurately
    in my very humble opinion we are about to see the most significant paradigm shift in tank design in 80-100 years

    • @wolven777
      @wolven777 Před 18 dny +3

      Spot on! There are two ways to go that I can think of, extreme mobility and camouflage or even more armoring, but tanks cannot remain unchanged.

    • @notaspy1227
      @notaspy1227 Před 18 dny +2

      Yeah, Russia can't afford the R&D for that and I don't think Iran and North Korea will be much help.
      At least Western designs are made around crew survival.

    • @JAy-dx1xb
      @JAy-dx1xb Před 18 dny +1

      ​@@wolven777 ya and even with infinitry there gonna need anti drone capabilities to I've ben thinking shotguns and bird shot you don't have to destroy the Droid just down it

    • @wolven777
      @wolven777 Před 18 dny +1

      @@JAy-dx1xb I don't think armor can be reinforced without severe loss in mobility and a more difficult maintenance and logistic, unless they invent some ulra light extra hard armor.
      Russians are very good with low cost high practicality solutions, I bet we will soon see a turret with a shotgun that engages drones.

    • @JAy-dx1xb
      @JAy-dx1xb Před 18 dny

      @@wolven777 Russia built there military around that the Ukraine war just prove them right wars is not about technology its about how much you have and I believe most of there T model tanks use the same mechanism making logistics and field repairing easier I wish the usa would stop with there tech up multiple billion dollars tanks there good against goat farmers but a real army there are gonna have to be changes we haven't seen real large scale war from the usa since ww2

  • @patrickdegenaar9495
    @patrickdegenaar9495 Před 17 dny +5

    T14 tanks cost around $7M. For the same money, you could buy 20 -30 automated (crewless) Toyota pickups with bolted on light armour, mounted missiles, and 50cal machine guns. Given today's battlefield, I suspect the latter would be much more effective.

    • @bm952
      @bm952 Před 17 dny +1

      Those are great mine removing vehicles

    •  Před 17 dny

      T14's don't exist, so no they don't.

    • @patrickdegenaar9495
      @patrickdegenaar9495 Před 17 dny

      I'm just going by the Wikipedia estimate en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-14_Armata. But you are right. It is not in production. So the estimate is just that. Either way, my point was that a swarm of fast, cheap, automated, less-armored systems will as a whole survive longer and provide equal or greater firepower for the same amount of investment.

    •  Před 17 dny

      @@patrickdegenaar9495 Oh, like chinese golf carts? Now you are just makin' shit up...

    • @LunaticTheCat
      @LunaticTheCat Před 17 dny

      You couldn't be more wrong

  • @ZAELish
    @ZAELish Před 18 dny +5

    Active defence systems and more top defence

  • @Somewhat_Unknown
    @Somewhat_Unknown Před 17 dny +5

    Not versed in this topic at all but having a hell of a time reading the comments.

  • @marcm.
    @marcm. Před 18 dny +10

    Knowing how Russians do things to the letter of the law or contract, while killing the spirit of it, I'm willing to bet that those 20 original prototypes are the pre-production tanks also. I'm willing to bet that they only have 20 tanks, and those are the original prototypes, relabeled as pre-production pre-serial whatever. I'm also willing to bet, that they will send those pre-production tanks back to the factory and upgrade them and make into serial production number tanks, in addition to actually new production versions. The wording of all those contracts was just fudgy enough, to make me think that they're going to or have already massaged the meaning. The Kremlin is always about illusion, or grifting

    • @user-kc9nf5yq8n
      @user-kc9nf5yq8n Před 18 dny +2

      поплачь в подушку, иллюзионист

    • @dominuslogik484
      @dominuslogik484 Před 18 dny +3

      @@user-kc9nf5yq8n the real illusion is the 15 year old tank design still not put into actual production.

    • @user-kc9nf5yq8n
      @user-kc9nf5yq8n Před 18 dny

      @@dominuslogik484 ты видимо просто тупой, в нем уже просто нет смысла, потому что сражения танк на танк редкость, а нужны Цари Мангалы для прорыва обороны и защиты от дронов + рабочие лошадки - Т-90, Т-72 б3 с мангалами и рэбами (которые у нас уже стоят, что там у вас по рэбам?) Но ты можешь сесть в свое высокотехнологичное гавно - Абрамс или Леопард, и сгореть там нахрен, не доехав даже до линии соприкосновения

    • @johnclay2716
      @johnclay2716 Před 18 dny

      @@dominuslogik484 15 year old design? You mean 35 year old design?
      T-14 is a late 80s Soviet design

    • @dominuslogik484
      @dominuslogik484 Před 18 dny

      @@johnclay2716 when I say 15 years old im talking about the finalized design and not counting the time the Soviets did the heavy lifting then collapsed during the research stage.

  • @kevenmendez6918
    @kevenmendez6918 Před 16 dny +11

    Cost 5-20 million for one gen 5 tank just imagine how many 50$ drones u could buy with that kind of money… you could fill the sky with drones

    • @davout5775
      @davout5775 Před 16 dny +3

      The problem with that is $50 drones can easily be defeated by some more serious nation like the US that knows a thing or 2 about EW

    • @gaborrajnai6213
      @gaborrajnai6213 Před 16 dny +1

      If that would be the case we would see it in Ukraine dont you think...@@davout5775

    • @someboi4535
      @someboi4535 Před 16 dny +7

      ​@@davout5775Russia literally has better EW than the US

    • @davout5775
      @davout5775 Před 16 dny +2

      @@someboi4535 Is that the reason why Russia is now making "tutel tanks"? Because they can't jam even basic, consumer-grade drones?

    • @GhostScout42
      @GhostScout42 Před 16 dny +6

      @@davout5775 the turtle tanks have a drone jammer on it Ignoramous, and yes, Russia has always had better EW because that is how they decided to defend against US

  • @paulpowell4871
    @paulpowell4871 Před 18 dny +4

    Basically the Battleship in 1941

  • @secondamendment1927
    @secondamendment1927 Před 18 dny +9

    remember when binkov got to talk about hypothetical war, rather than war? The days of affording at least 2 meals a day, even on a walmart salary, with manageable fuel prices?
    Yeah, me niether, thank you 2020s

  • @ycplum7062
    @ycplum7062 Před 18 dny +5

    There is another advantage to older and cheaper. Russia can no long produce some ofthe more advanced electro/optical components.
    I don't think the term "obsolete" is approriate. The tanks is presently less effective. Historically, being less effective does not make an item obsolete. Almost always, an item becomes obsolte when something(s) else can do the same job more effectively.

    • @Vlad_-_-_
      @Vlad_-_-_ Před 18 dny +1

      Older and cheaper also means more crew that needs to be trained, more logistics involved for more vehicles, its not only advantages

    • @WRAAAMmh
      @WRAAAMmh Před 18 dny

      Military tech might be an exemption to that rule. Advancements in firepower has made stuff like armor and fortifications (as they were) obsolete many times.

    • @Vlad_-_-_
      @Vlad_-_-_ Před 18 dny

      @@WRAAAMmh Tech rules nowadays.

    • @HairLessBush
      @HairLessBush Před 18 dny

      All the technology that Russia cannot produce now comes from china. That lack of technology talking point is old and debunked now.
      T14 just doesn't make strategic sense to mass produce when t90 is cheaper faster/easier to produce and is Battle tested and can do the job just as good if not better.
      Making a new tank puts strain on the logictis and production line because for menufacturing new tanks new supply chain / process's are needed to be established.
      So Russia just goes with t90 mass-producing since everything is already established and calibrated Russia just needs to ramp up production when russia needs more of it and looks like russia is doing just that.

  • @eos538
    @eos538 Před 18 dny +3

    I highly doubt the T-14 was ever used in Ukraine. Both sides film everything, and we never got a single geolocated photo of one. And I suspect Russia concluded that the negative propaganda of T-14’s getting blown up would far overshadow any small advantage the tank would bring to the battlefield.

  • @ReviveHF
    @ReviveHF Před 18 dny +8

    The obvious answer is : Russia is not fighting a counter-insurgency warfare(For example Chenchen War and Battle of Marawi in Phillipines), instead they were waging attrition warfare(For example Second Sino Japanese War and the current War in Ukraine). T-14 wasn't adequate enough for the task, also you need to import military graded chips for the T-14 components as well.

  • @Markfr0mCanada
    @Markfr0mCanada Před 15 dny +27

    The T14 has such amazing stealth technology that none have been detected in Ukraine!

    • @sting2death2
      @sting2death2 Před 15 dny +6

      Yea, The Abrams, Leopard 2, and Challenger 2 should copy T-14 stealth technology, seeing how their best contribution to the war was blowing up on camera.

    • @joshnelson6750
      @joshnelson6750 Před 15 dny +5

      @@sting2death2 Meanwhile Russia has sent over 3000 of its own tanks into low orbit. Truly an amazing feat of engineering, eh comrade?

    • @sting2death2
      @sting2death2 Před 15 dny +1

      @@joshnelson6750 most of the knock outs are not catastrophic and the crew abandon the tanks, and despite the low numbers of Western MBTs we've already had at least 1 Leo and Chally toss their turret, and an Abrams cook-off into the fighting compartment (presumably mid-reload).
      The Da soviet engineering comrade part is the fact that Russia can pump out over 3000 tanks and then some. The Challenger 2 also turned out to be the worst of them all, breaking down and sinking in the mud constantly, so much so that Banderastan stopped fielding them.

    • @joshnelson6750
      @joshnelson6750 Před 15 dny +3

      @sting2death2 Russian didn't produce the vast majority of the tanks it's lost in Ukraine - the USSR did.
      The fact of the matter is that their tank production is not able to keep up with their losses. Hence why so many old relics from the 60s and before have to pulled out of mothball and sent to the front.
      That's not to say that Western countries would be able to keep up either, but NATO generally focuses on quality rather than quantity.

    • @kaizer7568
      @kaizer7568 Před 15 dny +2

      ​@@joshnelson6750 the fact of the matter is Russia is getting rid of old tech

  • @Ghent_Halcyon
    @Ghent_Halcyon Před 17 dny +8

    So it’s exactly as everyone has been saying, they can’t afford it, just like the SU-57.

    • @ArmUkraine
      @ArmUkraine Před 17 dny +4

      Bro I’ve just argued with a rusky for 72 hours on the Su57. He tried to claim russia had 50 of them along with 20 Su75😂

    • @kiabtoomlauj6249
      @kiabtoomlauj6249 Před 17 dny +5

      A nation with a GDP 50%, at the most optimistic estimate, of the GDP of the lazy, uneducated state of California can't afford to buy hundreds of high-end tanks, EVEN if it had the technologies & all components required, for mass production.
      And that's really the crux of the matter.
      While all these 6th-grade operated CZcams channel trotted out this or that silly arguments, the fact of the matter is, Russia simply isn't capable of mass producing high-end military and consumer products. They could produce a few to a dozen or so, of these very sophisticated things (T-14, Su-57, etc).... very similar to what the US did with its SR-71 program back in the 1960s, when it didn't have enough high quality titanium. The US Pentagon/CIA used shell companies to import titanium from Russua/the USSR.
      But that kind of scheme, again, could only get you so far. Mass production is NEVER going to work.
      China is able to produce seemingly anything it needs, from a technology stand-point; but even China can't produce high-end semi-conductors/high-end chips (e.g., 5nm, 3nm, 2nm, and next generation kinds of chips that ALL AI COMPUTATION must have). China's scientists said, recently, they've been able to by-pass a certain man-made processes, when it comes to chip fabrication, etc. But, still, that's BARELY published in peer reviewed papers; that means the actual engineering part of such an approach is 10 or 15 years away.... assuming advances on THAT IDEA keep continuing....
      In the mean time, China is stuck with largely 10nm & 7nm chips, the only ones she has the TOOLS to fabricate, with the most advanced laser tools and other essential electronic components from the US, Western Europe, etc. being restricted recently.....
      China likely has some reserves of 5nm for its own use; but Russia ian't getting none of it.
      BTW, Russia is a northern European country, just as highly literate and educated as its other northern European neighbors (Estonians, Fins, Swedes, Norwegians et al), and with 145M people, Russia has ZERO TECH COMPANY on the list of "The Top 100 biggest tech companies in the world."
      You simply can't mass produce high end products if you are THAT bad in the ENGENDERING and NURTURING of technologies and companies that deal with high-end tech.
      Russians are, again, IMMENSELY creative, due to their high education; but ZERO of them --- if they live in Russia ---- is going to come up with Google, IBM, Qualcomm, GoPro, Mercedes Benz, BMW, Toyota, Samsung, Apple, FB, CZcams, TSMC, Intel, Nvidia, ASML, KlaxoSmithKline, Bayer, Sanofi, Johnson-Johnson, Tesla, Merck, AstraZeneca, AbbVie, Roche, Novartis, Apple, Amazon, Broadcom, etc.
      100% of the individual Russian Americans and Russians who've found giant tech companies like Google... they've gotten the phuc out of Russia. Or their parents did.
      Russia, as a society, is mired in primitive authoritarianism... from the Tsar to Stalin to Comrade GKB Col. Putin.... individuals inside Russia, again, simply can't fully express themselves and their ideas.
      There also is little to no finance.
      A dozen to a few hundred Oligarchs and Putin horded all the wealth dug up or sucked out of Russia's lands; and most of such wealth --- when they're converted to currencies ---- are stashed away in offshore accounts, invested in physical properties ("great arts," lands, super yachts, sporting teams, mansions & other real estates).... or buried back in the ground or kept in vaults.

    • @sujitbala1492
      @sujitbala1492 Před 17 dny +1

      At least they are actually getting Su-57s, slow but steadily. 22 and counting, excluding prototypes. T-14 as far as I know isn't really ramping up production.

    • @sujitbala1492
      @sujitbala1492 Před 17 dny

      ​@@ArmUkraine Haha. That's not true. Su-75 is still in testing. But this Su-57 drama isn't really that bad as the T-14. Its a pretty good aircraft, definitely. And they've finally gotten the anticipated AL-51 engines and claimed to equip their R-37M Hypersonics in the internal weapons bay. That's a good achievement if you ask me. People saying its a trash aircraft are probably younger than 12 years old, or politically biased internet users. Its stealth may not be as good as an F-22, but the Su-57 still counts as a low observable RCS airframe. All those "exposed rivets and screws, fan blades" are from the prototype models for promotion. You cant find those in the serial production models. Even then, I myself have serious doubts on the F-22's stealth which apparently nobody is talking about. Rust have started to form on some of the airframes, and some of those older models have rust that look really really bad. Besides that, the F-22 is very notorious in maintenance. I've heard the RAM coating easily gets removed and 1 hour of flying time requires 17 hours of maintenance. I don't know how the F-22 is going to fare well in an active wartime scenario where resources would be scarce and the economy would take hits but hey, that's why we have the F-35, which is a less of a pain than the F-22.

    • @ArmUkraine
      @ArmUkraine Před 17 dny

      @@sujitbala1492 4

  • @segalliongaming8925
    @segalliongaming8925 Před 18 dny +11

    It’s clear to me that the T-14 is being cancelled in favor of the Blyatmobile.

  • @Youtubegoblin23
    @Youtubegoblin23 Před 18 dny +16

    It’s in a war. You have plants setup that can mass produce a tanks that’s 70% as good for 15% the price. Doesn’t need a video to explain this

    • @nightowl9519
      @nightowl9519 Před 18 dny +2

      Almost like any tank is better than no tank.
      Just waiting for a Stug 3 style vehicle to be introduced.

    • @ChucksSEADnDEAD
      @ChucksSEADnDEAD Před 18 dny

      The other way around. A manufacturer complained about the Russian government requiring an older BMP variant even though it was more expensive.
      Money is "cheap". It wouldn't matter if the Armata was the same cost, if the electronics required more lead time due to sanctions.

    • @aleksandarbogicevic5946
      @aleksandarbogicevic5946 Před 18 dny

      Im waiting for modernized t-34s just for the lols

    • @attilamarics3374
      @attilamarics3374 Před 18 dny

      @@ChucksSEADnDEAD Thats not exactly right, the exact interviews was that the government requested it, but they told them that it would be more expensive. Xou left out crucial parts of it.

    • @steezydan8543
      @steezydan8543 Před 18 dny

      Russia has been saying it's been producing T-14s for the past ten years now.
      They also initiated the Special Military Operation.
      The T-14 never existed, was never in production, and Russia started the war in Ukraine knowing full well the T-14 would never participate.

  • @onedot6674
    @onedot6674 Před 18 dny +20

    Russia has tanks?! Thought all they had were shovels!

    • @Maxfr8
      @Maxfr8 Před 18 dny +1

      ☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️

    • @Vlad_-_-_
      @Vlad_-_-_ Před 18 dny +3

      Greetings komrad, how is the 3 day special military operation going ?

    • @animaniac2618
      @animaniac2618 Před 18 dny +5

      @@Vlad_-_-_ greetings nazi, hows the counteroffensive going?

    • @HairLessBush
      @HairLessBush Před 18 dny +5

      ​@@Vlad_-_-_u mean the offensive that the USA general said?

    • @Vlad_-_-_
      @Vlad_-_-_ Před 18 dny

      @@HairLessBush No, I mean the failed russian one that was supposed to take 3 days

  • @Achmedsander
    @Achmedsander Před 18 dny +5

    Thanks since their inception tanks have been imagined as some kind of invincible dominating power and tanks fighting other tanks. At the start they sure were a force to be reckoned with if they had adequate infantry support, but this has become less and less true. Intelligence is the true king of war and nowadays you have detection platforms (drones, satellites) that can detect pretty much anything and achieving surprise is almost impossible. Combined with the fact that if you can detect a threat you can most likely hit and disable it. Investing in big expensive tanks doesn't make that much sense when they can so easily be disabled.

    • @fuckoff4705
      @fuckoff4705 Před 18 dny

      as opposed to any other war in history, in which knowing anything about your enemy wasn't valued????

  • @jloiben12
    @jloiben12 Před 15 dny +5

    Because it is a “prestige vehicle,” not a good one

  • @ic7481
    @ic7481 Před 14 dny +5

    My thoughts are that the focus will be on modifying it to effectively counter drones, and, if that can be done, they then have a highly desirable product. If drones can be reliably countered, that is a major advantage.

    • @tiagodagostini
      @tiagodagostini Před 13 dny +2

      They can. It is not so hard to make an automated small .50 scale turret that shot incomming drones. Problem is.. a constant radar emission would make it target of anti radiation missiles. Expensive tanks are not in a great position right now. Even the High end NATO tanks die as easily as the T72 (on side of ukraine) in this war.

    • @ic7481
      @ic7481 Před 13 dny +1

      @tiagodagostini don't necessarily need radar - optical detection methods can be used. Anti-radar missiles seem overkill for a tank anyway.

    • @macfly6237
      @macfly6237 Před 13 dny

      @@tiagodagostiniThe Abrams still a wonderful tank and far surpasses anything Russia has in their armory and their production is so good that they can be made just as fast as the T-34

    • @tiagostein4057
      @tiagostein4057 Před 13 dny

      @@macfly6237 Way to miss the point. Ukraine losses of tanks be them T64 T72 LEopard , AMX or Abrams have been EXACTLY proportional to the quantity of these tanks they have. That measn that the amazing super advanced tanks die as easily as CRAP tanks in the modern battlefield.

    • @AMOUREDD
      @AMOUREDD Před 10 dny

      The drones are a lot more movable than the gun, and the size of it🤏@@tiagodagostini

  • @rbartig
    @rbartig Před 18 dny +3

    Always amused when a picture of any Russian authority figure is shown, they always look like a James Bond villain.

  • @tickticktickBOOOOM
    @tickticktickBOOOOM Před 18 dny +4

    "Quantity has a quality all its own." - Stalin

  • @stanton7847
    @stanton7847 Před 18 dny +4

    If Russia is ever able to gain air superiority and successfully conduct combined arms operations, the T-14 will be useful. There is no sign this will happen though, so the T-14 is lost to history and likely will be replaced in the future with a tank better adapted to modern battlefield conditions.

    • @shuathe2nd
      @shuathe2nd Před 18 dny +1

      With russia turning into North Korea as each day passes it will likely be replaced by some T-72 derived bag ofspanners, but with some plastic mouldings to bring it up to date.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 Před 18 dny +5

      The T14 is just too expensive in a world of drones.

    • @milaro222
      @milaro222 Před 18 dny +1

      @@shuathe2nd Ukraine is turning into North Korea with closed borders and a totalitarian ideology, not Russia.

  • @user-nl6zv6hz6x
    @user-nl6zv6hz6x Před 18 dny +23

    Everyone has already realized that the future belongs to “turtle tanks.”

  • @Vandelberger
    @Vandelberger Před 18 dny +4

    It is a cryptid of a tank. T-14 seems like a shell concept with no combat reports to take from. They appear then disappear.

    • @Vandelberger
      @Vandelberger Před 18 dny +1

      @@foundones That is a foolish comparison. The Bradley is from the early 80s and simply troop transports with TOW missiles, but two quickly took out a T-95 pretty quickly due to the essential technology allowing them to drive and shoot at the same time. This is something most Russian tanks can’t due, at least not at any speed.the Bradley also have had few to no casualties when disabled. None have been full wipe outs crew and all.

  • @syaro5077
    @syaro5077 Před 17 dny +5

    I think the answer is pretty easy because the Russians don't want to spend a staggering amount of money on a vehicle that we could easily refer to as a Russian "Abrams" (even though they look nothing alike) and have to deal with all the problems that come with it. . a tank of such size and weight, vehicles that are clearly not very appropriate for the geography of the country. On the contrary, they prefer to continue with the standards they are accustomed to in medium-weight, easily adaptable and cheap tanks like the T-80 and T-90. Regarding these tanks, I believe that sooner or later Russia will unify them into a single platform to which they will be able to adapt the type of armament and engine necessary with minimal factory modifications, a cheap universal chassis that they will be able to mass produce on a unified production line. , or at least that is the impression I get from the development of practically all Russian vehicles today.

    • @phoenix211245
      @phoenix211245 Před 17 dny

      You are assuming that Russia will exist 10 years from now, which is a rather major requirement in building new tank models. Regardless of how the war in Ukraine goes, it's a second Afghanistan, and we all know what happened to USSR after. It's simply economically unsustainable, but we do get to watch them spew out nuclear threats every month or so, here's some fun to be had.

    • @graham5716
      @graham5716 Před 17 dny +7

      ​@phoenix211245 Your delusional if you think Russia is done for after this war lmao

    • @phoenix211245
      @phoenix211245 Před 17 dny +2

      @@graham5716 I thought I was delusional to think that USSR would collapse in 1990, yet it happened. I'm living through the beginning of Russia's collapse right now. There is A LOT of internal tension.
      You are delusional if you think that the country will exist in 10 years. It's rather silly to believe a country that disintegrates every 50-60 years will last.

    • @phoenix211245
      @phoenix211245 Před 17 dny

      @@graham5716 same could have been said about the USSR, and where is in now?

    • @SanarySeggnete
      @SanarySeggnete Před 17 dny +3

      For Russia, even if they lose, it would be just another Crimean War... (They lost the Crimean War as the whole Europe sided with Ottoman, but they in the end won by tired out the European countries, that none cares if they broke the war treaty, invaded Ottoman some years later and achieved their goal).
      But they are winning in the battlefield, and the situation in their home ground is not as bad as 1942 (when Soviet almost bankrupted due to corruption and the fragmentation inside their Party after the Great Purge), Russia is still in their comfortable zone (not your normal standard comfortable zone, of course...)

  • @druid5808
    @druid5808 Před 18 dny +8

    Oh mah gaaaaaa. As if this opinion was already voiced 2 years ago but a random Scottish alcoholic.

  • @MaxiosMB
    @MaxiosMB Před 18 dny +8

    Seems difficult to change lines of productions for a tank that still a new platform now that they're fighting a war.
    Plus tanks are at a dead end right now, as far as their combat role etc...
    So yeah modernizing relible current tanks seems to be more sensible

  • @joshuafairbanks5643
    @joshuafairbanks5643 Před 18 dny +3

    Tanks need a complete redesign to be effective in the modern battlefield. As of right now they are built to be the strongest against taking direct fire shots from the front. But 60% of Rush's tank losses were from drones, and even a lot more anti-tank missiles are starting to have top attack capability. So building a tank with all the armor concentrated on the front is outdated and 20th century thinking.
    Also tank on tank almost never happens anymore.

  • @stevinharper3551
    @stevinharper3551 Před 17 dny +12

    Russian excuses are great. They don't even bother trying to make it believable

    • @jamesrowlands8971
      @jamesrowlands8971 Před 16 dny +1

      now explain why the West can't produce as many shells as the Russians can, despite spending more than $1tn a year more than the Russians on arms...

    • @davout5775
      @davout5775 Před 16 dny +2

      @@jamesrowlands8971 The US produces 1.2 million 155mm shells in peace times. Russia produces 3m shells of all kind during conflict. Besides, the US uses not artillery but their airforce. Direct comparisons cannot be made.

    • @jamesrowlands8971
      @jamesrowlands8971 Před 15 dny

      @@davout5775 ahh, so the US chooses to fight a more expensive form of warfare, yet keeps on losing. Weird. I wonder why that is.

    • @davout5775
      @davout5775 Před 15 dny +1

      @@jamesrowlands8971 Losing? Can you please give me one example where the US was militarily defeated?

    • @jamesrowlands8971
      @jamesrowlands8971 Před 15 dny

      @@davout5775 911.

  • @oleopathic
    @oleopathic Před 18 dny +9

    Wonderwaffe failed to materialize in light of Blyat-Tank's introduction.

  • @Benny_Shill
    @Benny_Shill Před 18 dny +15

    Drones changed warfare. You don't need advanced tanks, you need a metal box on top of the tank to stop drones and rockets from penetrating the hull.

    • @JAy-dx1xb
      @JAy-dx1xb Před 18 dny +5

      Right Abrams showed us that 10 million a tank and 150 dollar drones are leaving them in the dirt. Cheaper tanks that u can mass produce is the way to go and Russia has that on lock

    • @marcpaulus6291
      @marcpaulus6291 Před 18 dny +1

      @@JAy-dx1xb No they dont. They cant mass produce. All they do right now is pull old Tanks from their massive Storages and send them into combat with a cheap overhaul. When their storage runs out the cant even outproduct daily losses.

    • @alexnderrrthewoke4479
      @alexnderrrthewoke4479 Před 18 dny

      ​@@JAy-dx1xbdon't forget t-72 destroying abrams easy with one shot

    • @alexnderrrthewoke4479
      @alexnderrrthewoke4479 Před 18 dny

      ​@@marcpaulus6291yes they can dude. Russia is mass producing all tank models and they reatarted t-80 tanks production again. Cope

    • @avarion9538
      @avarion9538 Před 18 dny +1

      @@alexnderrrthewoke4479 not really. They take 80% from storage, and even this is just 120 tanks a month. That's not really mass production, if you look at the confirmed losses. Also keep in mind, a lot of it is T-55 and T-62, so if we talk about new tanks, the real number is around 25 a month. Russia published the 120 tanks per month and if you look into the factories, that produce the tanks, you can find the number, that 80% are from storage, easily.

  • @kasatkaduppy126
    @kasatkaduppy126 Před 6 hodinami +1

    We took upgraded shovels instead 🤣🤣🤣

  • @springbloom5940
    @springbloom5940 Před 17 dny +3

    Probably because they're smarter than everyone thats just plowing ahead with tanks and other systems they started before the Ukraine proving ground proved them wrong.

  • @DOI_ARTS
    @DOI_ARTS Před 18 dny +17

    The Turtle Tank was more successful than the T14

    • @springbloom5940
      @springbloom5940 Před 17 dny +9

      ...and the Leopard 2... and the Challenger 2... and the Abrams...

    • @skkhammuansangngaihte4989
      @skkhammuansangngaihte4989 Před 17 dny +10

      ​@@springbloom5940all these tanks would obliterate any russian tank in open combat like during gulf war

    • @abas656thegodemperor9
      @abas656thegodemperor9 Před 17 dny +1

      expecting a conflict like that is naive at best, warfare changes and so should tanks,tanks arent gonna reach an end all be all stage,there will be pros and cons to every tank,just as there was in the gulf war.​@@skkhammuansangngaihte4989

    • @PadparadZha27
      @PadparadZha27 Před 17 dny +6

      @@skkhammuansangngaihte4989 "like during the gulf war" it's like having a M60 shooting at a T-34, poorly trained Iraqi tankers in rotting T-55's and T-72's vs modernized M1's isn't a good comparison.

    • @skkhammuansangngaihte4989
      @skkhammuansangngaihte4989 Před 17 dny +2

      @@PadparadZha27 russian tanks still would likely lose to most tanks of west under normal convenient fight.Unless they fought the nato tanks from 1980s

  • @b21raider27
    @b21raider27 Před 18 dny +21

    Putin’s next super yacht or more $ on the T-14, guess what’s going to win out?
    $700 million super yacht not too expensive. Da comrade, da!

  • @ingamgoduka57
    @ingamgoduka57 Před 18 dny +3

    Right now its all about how much it costs & how fast it can be produce.

  • @user-fq7vs8dl5k
    @user-fq7vs8dl5k Před 17 dny +8

    The fabled, propaganda T-14.

  • @TGTexan
    @TGTexan Před 17 dny +5

    Simple answer
    Drones.

    • @Rehunauris
      @Rehunauris Před 17 dny +1

      It's also cheaper to send soldiers towards enemy lines in Chinese golf carts than in armored vehicles.
      Of course that only works when country doesn't really care about numbled of casualties.

    • @TGTexan
      @TGTexan Před 17 dny

      @@Rehunauris I got a genuine question, How do you assault trenches? Almost all the videos except those early days of the invasion were Russian soldiers assaulting trenches with tanks and BMPs Plus artillery coverage, I mean during bakhmut arc, they were pummeling everything using FABs And 152s and 207s before launching a ground assault. If thats what you called running towards enemy lines, what is the best way to assault a trench or a fortified enemy. Genuinely asking here. Plus I saw this Ukrainian Media I think its Ukraine24 Yt channel, they were encircled by the russians, and the commander of the company himself told the journalist that Russians have the habit of shelling the positions for 24/7 and after that they will roar the Tank's Engine to signal the start of assault and he jokingly stated "we know their tactics very well but what can we do we are outnumbered, no ammos, and outgunned". The shoer documentary ended with russians shouting at them on the nearby houses demanding for their surrender. And If thats what you call sending soldiers toward enemy lines with gold carts, Idk what to believe anymore. All I see is them on the top of BMPs escorted by tanks assaulting trenches.

  • @rolandyamel6376
    @rolandyamel6376 Před 18 dny +9

    And nobody else around here has a T-14 hyperdrive I promise you that!

  • @TheRajmoney
    @TheRajmoney Před 18 dny +7

    with the drones, tanks are prety useless these days. you can buy like 500 drones for the price of one tank and you can kill like 100s of enemy tanks with 500 drones.

    • @tedarcher9120
      @tedarcher9120 Před 18 dny +1

      Active protection system can defend the tank

    • @nicholasgutierrez9940
      @nicholasgutierrez9940 Před 18 dny +1

      @@tedarcher9120Not against 100, 200? It’s cost effectiveness. But armies still need tanks for breakthroughs.

    • @lancerevo9747
      @lancerevo9747 Před 18 dny +1

      ​@@tedarcher9120drones can attack in large numbers.

  • @SnowmanTF2
    @SnowmanTF2 Před 16 dny +8

    Eh, AbramX moving to three crew in the hull was a development concept by the company, that does not necessarily mean the US Army is planning on doing the same with their M1A3.

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 Před 15 dny

      That wasnt the US Army or any state contracted thing.
      It was mostly a company making a few upgrades to sell to other countries.

  • @o.cheburek
    @o.cheburek Před 15 dny +6

    You dont need any tanks if you have a lot of biomaterial zombies😂

  • @wvt5825
    @wvt5825 Před 18 dny +5

    In essence, when a country's MOD/DoD reduces the quantity of serial production, the more expensive a single unit becomes.

  • @dragontail2k6
    @dragontail2k6 Před 18 dny +3

    It's light tanks with APS and IFV with anti-tank capabilities thats winning this race.

  • @thoso1973
    @thoso1973 Před 18 dny +7

    No production line for the T-14 was ever set up. The few existing prototypes were 'manually assembled'.
    It's similar for the Su-57 Felon; when India withdrew from the program, there were no foreign buyers for the aircraft, hence the program stalled. No foreign buyers means no funding. The existing fleet of Su-57 are equipped with an old engine instead of the intended new design. Not stealth either.

    • @ianlarge9016
      @ianlarge9016 Před 18 dny +1

      Any prototype is produced manually by definition as they are small production batches. You don't automate production for prototypes due to the cost outlay involved.

  • @avarion9538
    @avarion9538 Před 18 dny +20

    2 reasons:
    1. The engine is terrible and can't get fixed
    2. It doesn't exist. Just hilariously bad prototypes

  • @gont183
    @gont183 Před 18 dny +10

    T-14 is in the same boat as SU-57: unaffordable for Russia.

    • @Digital_Griffin
      @Digital_Griffin Před 17 dny

      They were probably hoping to export both of those to other countries in order to subsidize development and production, but the war has largely put a stop to that. The Russian military just doesn't buy enough of them on its own to justify extremely expensive, bleeding-edge development programs

  • @ratatoskr1069
    @ratatoskr1069 Před 2 dny +1

    I really wonder why they are not investing heavily in the Sturmgeschütz concept now. Save on expensive equipment and turret, invest in low visibility and cost-effectiveness for a close infantry support assault gun concept.

  • @jamesgornall5731
    @jamesgornall5731 Před 14 dny +1

    I honestly think now would be a great time for every military to reevaluate their tank designs and their fundamental role in warfare. Take a pause, build what you're already building if it is still needed, but go back to the drawing board for anything else in the future