How Many Tanks Does Russia Really Have? And Where Are They?

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  • čas přidán 25. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 5K

  • @CovertCabal
    @CovertCabal  Před 2 lety +149

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    • @kingoliever1
      @kingoliever1 Před 2 lety +53

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    • @thickboi4304
      @thickboi4304 Před 2 lety +36

      Cringe

    • @thickboi4304
      @thickboi4304 Před 2 lety +9

      L

    • @kimkim-mh7bv
      @kimkim-mh7bv Před 2 lety

      Hey sir if you can satellite and see what happen in russia like that than you must be super king hacker. Do you even use any hack code for doing this? For god shake and humanity you can provide information where putin live and his routines and also all his nuke hiding. So ukraine and allies might .... Him than everything will be over.

    • @rrclassics9530
      @rrclassics9530 Před 2 lety

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  • @llJiggyFlyll
    @llJiggyFlyll Před 2 lety +4484

    It's actually pretty smart of Russia to hide their tanks East of the Urals, it keeps them out of reach of the Ukrainian farmers, John Deere tractors simply don't have that kind of operational range.

    • @paddy7812
      @paddy7812 Před 2 lety +262

      I heard that the 1st Ukrainian Airborne Farmer Division is looking at a possible operation against them!

    • @ace1262
      @ace1262 Před 2 lety +135

      @@paddy7812 1st Ukrainian Farmers slogan : "Farmers Tow Away!"

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 2 lety +27

      @@ace1262 unfortunately they got first casualty already, one farmer killed by russian troops

    • @redbovine
      @redbovine Před 2 lety +95

      I was hoping for a Russian invasion in the US. I want a tank.

    • @jakleo337
      @jakleo337 Před 2 lety +41

      " Nothing Runs Like A Deere ".

  • @chrismalcomson7640
    @chrismalcomson7640 Před 2 lety +2069

    I served with a tank regiment in Germany many years ago. We had about 15 challenger tanks. Including support staff it took 500 servicemen to keep them fully operational. That doesn't include the trucks that move the tanks to the location of operations. If you leave a car outside for 2 years you almost certainly have issues getting the thing going, tanks are no different... To bring a stored tank back into service is not as simple as jacking the engine and putting in a new battery, I can only imagine what a siberian winter would do a stationary tank...

    • @pavel9652
      @pavel9652 Před 2 lety +99

      Wow, that is a lot of man hours!

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 2 lety +17

      let dutch youtubers handle this :D though they have mostly light tanks, havent seen any proper MBT + that would cost a fortune per day just for gasoline.

    • @PeterJavi
      @PeterJavi Před 2 lety +62

      That's the thing about Siberian winters though, very cold, but also very dry, maybe that's not fatal for tanks within a month

    • @Prometheus4096
      @Prometheus4096 Před 2 lety +72

      @@effexon They sold them, then leased them back so the expertise was not lost. Honestly, the Dutch don't need tanks. Even in a NATO-Russia war. Countries like Poland, Finland and Ukraine need the tanks. We can provide better in other ways. We should definitely get new subs.

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 2 lety +10

      @@Prometheus4096 subs are cool, Id think danes would support you in that, like norway... and swedish industry is awesome in that area. Im not sure if you're swedish or dutch but either way, same applies. I forgot to spesify in comment I meant swedish forces with no MBT's but all kinds of light armored, fast vehicles. Makes sense in forestry alternating terrain, some parts mountainous swedish land, with useful crossing of rivers capability.

  • @docE3885
    @docE3885 Před 2 lety +104

    I think many of the tanks that look restorable would have some serious problems with how much corruption there is at the storage and maintenance bases. Every valuable piece of electronics and thousands of tons of scrap copper or anything else with scrap value was stripped and sold. That and most of the maintenance budget ending up in officers pockets because they send the crappiest most corrupt officers to Siberia where the tanks are stored making them bitter and even more corrupt there is not much chance for the “thousands and thousands” of tanks Russia has in reserve. Even the tanks Russia brought to Ukraine had horrible issues due to lack of maintenance so the ones they left behind are probably total shitshows.

    • @jaimejimenez4223
      @jaimejimenez4223 Před 2 lety

      Thank you captain obvious

    • @kurtwpg
      @kurtwpg Před 2 lety +3

      You sell 10 stolen tanks to some random 3rd world warlord he'll come back for thousands of stolen shells.

    • @brokeandtired
      @brokeandtired Před 2 lety

      You can guranteed that only the ones stored inside have engines/transmissions that are not totally rusted out. The Russian military has been stealing from itself for decades...You can guarantee they long ago stripped out the valuable stuff (like copper) and stole the money for the maintenance budget. Also the turret rings are almost certainly rusted solid.

    • @watchingvids9899
      @watchingvids9899 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/UUN8FusrQQ0/video.html
      tank repair

    • @user-jj3zv8qo4i
      @user-jj3zv8qo4i Před rokem +2

      Ты бредишь, дружище, какая электроника, расконсервированные танки идут ремонт или модернизацию, та техника которую бросили не дерьмовая а осталась без топлива , но видимо ты слишком тупой чтобы это понять. В России около 10000 танков законсервированны и на базах хранении - и это по сути только бронекорпуса, которые не могут сразу идти в бой но это поправимо мой недалёкий западный друг.

  • @koolski
    @koolski Před 2 lety +29

    I too served in a tank battalion. Even with regular maintenance, a tank will break parts just sitting there. we spent many hours doing regular maintenance. so tanks sitting outside would very rapidly deteriorate. Those kept inside are the ones they really care about but even those will need regular maintenance to keep them operable.

  • @solomonofakkad1927
    @solomonofakkad1927 Před 2 lety +1236

    Great video, but it missed out another important caveat. You can have a lot of tanks, but if you don't have enough crews to man it in short notice, the number of tanks you have in storage won't matter much. Not only that, crews are actually a small part of the manpower requirement to operate a tank, each tank needs support, which required dozens of crews. The support crews are needed to keep the crews fed, the tanks armed and fueled, and if the tank is stuck or damaged - repaired, and if the tank can't be repaired in the field, you must have a recovery vehicle to tow it away to be repaired in a better equipped facility, and those have to be supported as well. If the crews are injured, they must be extracted and lifted away to relative safety. In a high-intensity conflict, a tank can ran out of fuel and ammunitions in a matter of hours, yes, not days, hours. Keeping tank crews alive is important because active service tanks are usually manned by experienced crew, losing them means less experienced ones will have to takeover, and they're more likely to suffer losses.

    • @matthewgibbs6886
      @matthewgibbs6886 Před 2 lety +44

      just like the german army lots of toys and no crews. they had the same issues when i was stationed there. the ended mandatory enlistment soon after i left.

    • @randoviral8113
      @randoviral8113 Před 2 lety +6

      There is always crew training in wartime for one equipment or another

    • @shingshongshamalama
      @shingshongshamalama Před 2 lety +73

      You can have a million tanks, but if you don't have the oil to fuel them, you have a million paperweights.

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 Před 2 lety

      AI

    • @panderson9561
      @panderson9561 Před 2 lety +29

      Reservist/former active duty. Russia has universal conscription. Because of that, there are tens of thousands of former tank crewmen, and support crew, in Russia. No, they won't be as good as active duty...not that they've given a good accounting of themselves of late. But they will have some knowledge/training on the tanks they will be using.

  • @scollyer.tuition
    @scollyer.tuition Před 2 lety +445

    For those wondering, the accordion guy is a standard feature of Russian tank maintenance: he is there to make sure that the engine is nicely tuned up.

    • @Psychol-Snooper
      @Psychol-Snooper Před 2 lety +17

      You mean the Soviet boom box?

    • @editor4958
      @editor4958 Před 2 lety +15

      in Russia Accordion PLAYS YOU!

    • @donwilbur8436
      @donwilbur8436 Před 2 lety +19

      Not accordian. Is arm operated turbocharger.

    • @k49jpx9k
      @k49jpx9k Před 2 lety +8

      Do they also dance at the end of maintenance?

    • @FelisImpurrator
      @FelisImpurrator Před 2 lety +1

      Ah, you played us all like a fiddle.

  • @Paul-jc4xh
    @Paul-jc4xh Před 2 lety +149

    THIS is what good research looks like! And the explanation on required preventative maintenance costs was invaluable to understanding the difference between total tanks and total useful tanks. No one cares if Russia has 10,000 rust rocks.
    Well done sir.

    • @MrChipMC
      @MrChipMC Před 2 lety +8

      Dont forget the fact, US tanks are stored in hot dry deserts. While russian's tanks rotten in forests and swamps)
      All rubber parts and electronics dies after few years in such conditions.
      So,real numbers about 2000 tanks in action-seems realistic

    • @Paul-jc4xh
      @Paul-jc4xh Před rokem +9

      @@MrChipMC Minus the 1000 that are already not coming back from Ukraine. LoL

    • @joggabonkers6380
      @joggabonkers6380 Před rokem +7

      Videos like this is gold. But according to some Russia has 10000 thousand tanks, 10000 working artillery pieces and unlimited shells.. So why is the russian fire rate in Donbass dropping considerably per day, was 50-60000 artillery shells a day for a month now its half of that on a good day. My guess is Russia wont have the shells to continue todays fire rate for much longer.

    • @droaks2
      @droaks2 Před rokem +1

      @@joggabonkers6380 I'm wondering that too. But of course, we all will just sit and wonder. It's totally unverifiable. Unless we happen to be working the Russian artiliary shell factory.

    • @ratfink2413
      @ratfink2413 Před rokem +3

      @@MrChipMC ive seen a t34 being pulled out the swamp thats been under water and mud for 70+ years, and it started up. so rust rocks can still shoot you dead, and those would be sent first to waste the enemies rockets on them rusty rocks!

  • @sailor916
    @sailor916 Před 2 lety +34

    When the Berlin wall collapsed and East Germany was taken over by the West, Battalions of lawyers and inspectors descended upon the East to find out what would have to be done for reunification. One of the first inspections was the military bases and staged equipment but what they found was shocking. 97% of the equipment, including tanks had simply been parked and sealed up when received from Russia. they are completely inoperable, not just dead batteries but cylinders and tracks rusted in place, there were actually trees growing through trucks and tank tracks. The Western forces could have walked in and taken over at any time and the Eastern forces would have been powerless to stop them. I suspect Russia's forces are the same.

    • @bobjones2041
      @bobjones2041 Před 2 lety

      "Never again war" because "Russians love their children too, moaned the Euros, the man from Russia a mensch just like me and you" therefore "go home Yankee go home" demanded West Germany.
      But despite West Germanys infatuation with left wing terrorists like the red Army Faction - formed in West Germany, equipped and operating out of East Germany - the West quickly turned to mocking the East Germans, not the Russians, for being stuck in the late 50s and not embracing modern expansionist Green Communism, which sent Germany to war in Kosovo with NATO.
      Now the Greens are clamoring to arm Ukraine with weapons for peace

    • @christopherlee5584
      @christopherlee5584 Před 2 lety +6

      For 50 years, we fought a vast lie.

    • @epicgamer3614
      @epicgamer3614 Před 2 lety +1

      I highly doubt that, east germany was feared by all as the most developed and dangerous warsaw pact member. Sounds like bs to me

    • @epicgamer3614
      @epicgamer3614 Před 2 lety +3

      @@christopherlee5584 bs. East germany was notoriously dangerous it was the best warsaw pact member state when it comes to trainining and skill

    • @christopherlee5584
      @christopherlee5584 Před 2 lety

      @@epicgamer3614 Agreed, East Germany WAS the best of the Warsaw Pact, and because of their German heritage were undoubtedly more "en ordnung" than the rest of the Bloc. However, my comment was not about the Warsaw Pact but of the USSR. The USSR then and Russia now are inefficient and corrupt. And are no real threat other than their nukes. Do you think E. Germany would have remained cowed for so many decades if they knew the truth??
      One MASSIVE lie....

  • @benjamindover7399
    @benjamindover7399 Před 2 lety +509

    My Russian buddy who was a tank mechanic 2 years ago told me that less than 10% of stored tanks in Russia could ever see service again. They've been stripped for parts for years.

    • @s.a.3882
      @s.a.3882 Před 2 lety +124

      So if we assume Russia has only 3,000 operational tanks and has lost approaching 1,000 tanks, destroyed, abandoned and captured, with another 1,000 needed to defend Russian soil - Poo-tin's special military operation will grind to a halt in another two months, as stocks become exhausted.

    • @roqsteady5290
      @roqsteady5290 Před 2 lety +73

      @@s.a.3882 Lets hope so. Given that Putin was planning for the war to be over in a week he probably didn’t even think about planning longer term supply of armoured vehicles.

    • @andreivaldez2929
      @andreivaldez2929 Před 2 lety +89

      Maybe so, but NATO militaries aren't cannibalizing their tanks at such a high rate, and they seem to be more competently maintained. 100 tanks versus 1000 tanks doesn't matter if you have the same budget and can't afford to maintain your 1000 tanks.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Před 2 lety

      @@s.a.3882 also the billions he spent to maintain/ modernize the military was pocketed by the generals.no joke.
      he arrested 20 top generals for stealing 10 billion since 2014. that was supposed to be used to get ready to invade ukraine. so putler has been planning this for a long time.

    • @Vlad-hi5sb
      @Vlad-hi5sb Před 2 lety +73

      @Ninja Crackpot Yep, but tank it is not something abstract (like a tank in general), one modern tank could easily destroy five older ones. And a lot of rus modern tanks were lost in the first 4 weeks) Rus is a big fake

  • @TheMeanmarine13
    @TheMeanmarine13 Před 2 lety +1266

    I appreciate that you take the time to look up stats and do your homework. This is one of the main reasons I follow your channel. Great content 👌 👍

    • @linolinmurka9959
      @linolinmurka9959 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, if you're braindead or damaged.

    • @A55Hol3_Actual
      @A55Hol3_Actual Před 2 lety +2

      🤦🏽‍♂️🤣

    • @osvagt
      @osvagt Před 2 lety +21

      No one seems to appreciate the guy playing the accordion at 7min : 40 sec to keep the mood up(?) for the maintenance guys

    • @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
      @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 Před 2 lety +7

      The fact that he doesnt lie and accasionaly do his own reaserch is the only reason I watch this chanel.

    • @passenger3
      @passenger3 Před 2 lety +7

      @@A55Hol3_Actual I'm Confused Over Your Comment. Would You Care To Expand Your Thinking And Reply To This Comment. !?
      That would be great 👍
      THANKS..!!!!

  • @brrrlak
    @brrrlak Před rokem +5

    Good work, thank you.
    Serving in a maintenance company in '84, I can tell how much work our fully functional Leopards were... And hell yeah, it was expensive

    • @CovertCabal
      @CovertCabal  Před rokem +4

      Thank you! I'm fascinated by the level of maintenance and logistics necessary. I knew it was huge and expensive, but never really appreciated it until recently.

    • @brrrlak
      @brrrlak Před rokem

      @@CovertCabal That, and I know from own exparince that we used to drive our tanks "round the block" at leat once a month. But w had 15, not 5000.....

  • @rerror3577
    @rerror3577 Před rokem +21

    I was looking at the grass, trying to determine how much the tanks have been moved. My logic being, a tank that can have grass growing nearby must be moved very rarely and therefore not maintained.
    The ones move to the Ukrainian border are nearly grass free, but even tanks you said looked functional have grass growing around them.
    I think that might be the best way to judge the inner workings of complex machinery from space.

    • @channel1.946
      @channel1.946 Před rokem

      especially if trees are growing around and through it. rusky military - more propaganda/bolivood industry. plus corruption/theft club protected by secresy

  • @bryandepaepe5984
    @bryandepaepe5984 Před 2 lety +511

    I'd bet Russia doesn't even know how many tanks they actually have.

    • @AEB1066
      @AEB1066 Před 2 lety +71

      No doubt money is being allocated to keep those tanks service ready but strangely all that happen was a super yatch got bought.

    • @vlajkovlajko495
      @vlajkovlajko495 Před 2 lety +4

      15000 in reserve on Ural.

    • @permeus2nd
      @permeus2nd Před 2 lety +74

      @@vlajkovlajko495 that's like saying a junkyard is a car dealership, ye the tanks may be there but its not much good if when you go check on them 90% of them have rusted into dust.

    • @jasperhorace7147
      @jasperhorace7147 Před 2 lety +33

      Certainly won’t be the number the yes men told Pootin.

    • @vlajkovlajko495
      @vlajkovlajko495 Před 2 lety

      @ST€pH@Ni€ Don't be happy,before end.

  • @AdurianJ
    @AdurianJ Před 2 lety +526

    Swedish vehicles in mobilization storage indoorswhere well maintained when they went in and had extra lubrication added for gunbarrels and such.
    They where also connected to a dry air system that ventilated them. Batteries where the only thing not present as these get old quickly.
    Instead the military had contracts with supliers to keep a fresh stockpile available nearby.
    These vehicles usually started right away or in minures even after decades in storage.

    • @GeraldMMonroe
      @GeraldMMonroe Před 2 lety +150

      Bet they also audit them to make sure nobody has ripped out all the wiring and sold it for scrap.

    • @psychoticchannel3244
      @psychoticchannel3244 Před 2 lety +86

      Thats russia my dude,ivan used the money for restoration on hookers and vodka 😅 what we do now?just send as many troops as they can,from 20.000 vehicles...100 or 200 must be still working 😅

    • @memeier9894
      @memeier9894 Před 2 lety +40

      Seals go bad from just sitting, after 5 years of just sitting alot of the seals would be dry rotted and would need replacing.

    • @STG44musikmeister
      @STG44musikmeister Před 2 lety +35

      That costs money. Precious BMW money for the officer in charge.

    • @fredsmith5473
      @fredsmith5473 Před 2 lety +59

      That's in Sweden, the land of Saab and Volvo, not Russia, the land of Moskwitch.
      I didn't get the impression from the video that many of those Russian tanks were stored in climate controlled conditions. I'd guess that money for a contract to have a store of batteries ready to go, would result in a lot of vodka drunk and not much else.

  • @GraniteOwlBear
    @GraniteOwlBear Před 2 lety +38

    One Russian storage facility I think you missed is in Omsk at 55.01623495426101, 73.39539285738252. Quite sizable. I counted at least 3000 armored vehicles (mixed tanks, DTR, BMP, propelled artillery etc,) and about as many trucks and cargo vehicles.

    • @antsky371
      @antsky371 Před 2 lety +8

      Trash due to total corruption

    • @1djbecker
      @1djbecker Před 2 lety +15

      That is Omsktransmash, a former tank factory. It appears to be basically a boneyard. There was a series of companies controlling it, getting contracts to refurbish the equipment there, and going out of business in questionable circumstances. Currently they do seem to have some business rebuilding old T-72 chassis into TOS-1A MLRS vehicles.

    • @thedausthed
      @thedausthed Před 2 lety +5

      That place. has few to none tanks

    • @brokeandtired
      @brokeandtired Před 2 lety +6

      The maintenance budget was clearly stolen along with anything that could be stripped out for cash. If they are outside you can guarantee that even the turret rings are rusted out.

    • @corylemons7242
      @corylemons7242 Před rokem +5

      You counted 3000 vehicles from a google maps image of a tank graveyard? Dude get a girlfriend or a job or anything holy shit

  • @xrotor7813
    @xrotor7813 Před rokem +4

    Got to love the tanker at 7:34 with the maintenance accordion.

  • @Yuri231
    @Yuri231 Před 2 lety +166

    WHAT REALLY HAPPENED: Dimitry was cooking potatoes and by accident put the ship's kitchen on fire. The crew then followed the Russian's procedures to extinguish fire: sinking the ship. By the way, Russia didn't lose a single tank in this war: setting their own tanks on fire is a Russian technique to keep mosquitoes away. EVERYTHING IS GOING AS PLANED!

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 Před 2 lety +43

      Russia Yesterday: It was an accidental fire that sank the Moscow.
      Russia Today: And we are striking Kyiv in *retaliation* for... uh... that accidental fire.

    • @millerrepin4452
      @millerrepin4452 Před 2 lety

      Don't forget to mention that there have been 0 Russian casualties, they are just sleeping from winning too much.

    • @stingingmetal9648
      @stingingmetal9648 Před 2 lety

      Ukraine: 13 heroes died telling the Russians to go fuck yourself
      Russia: they're right here on video and there's 82 of them.
      Did you guys ever figure out who the "ghost of Kiev" is? Lololol

    • @jkphotography7607
      @jkphotography7607 Před 2 lety +11

      @@macmcleod1188I read pootin said it was a meteor that hit battleship Moskva. 🤣

    • @jeckjeck3119
      @jeckjeck3119 Před 2 lety +12

      @@jkphotography7607
      Don't give them ideas, they are pathetic enough to use that excuse.

  • @eTraxx
    @eTraxx Před 2 lety +234

    Prior to Desert Shield etc. my tank company at Ft Hood TX .. D Co 3-32 AR was broken up to backfill A, B and C companies. For some reason we simply did not have the warm bodies to fill the BN. So. D Co was broken up and my PLT .. 3rd Herd were transferred to C Co. We walked down the line to our new tanks to find that the company had been using them for parts. It took WEEKS to get them up and running even at a basic level. It wasn't until we were to deploy to Saudi Arabia that the doors of warehouses opened up and we got any part we wanted .. prior to that you had to promise your first born to get anything. I can also tell you that simply not doing any maintenance on a tank (these were the M1 series Abrams) .. no maintenance of as little as a week would mean all kinds of problems .. you need to maintain them CONSTANTLY.

    • @bobbob-gx1iq
      @bobbob-gx1iq Před 2 lety +15

      They don't make them like they used to what happen to the good ole days of just kicking something until it worked

    • @joythought
      @joythought Před 2 lety +21

      Edward, thanks for your service and insight. The Russians must be having a hell of a time with their equipment. That plus logistics and leadership/doctrine may explain why they are so ineffective in actually invading.

    • @jamesozechoski8254
      @jamesozechoski8254 Před 2 lety

      @@bobbob-gx1iq ur embarrassing

    • @eTraxx
      @eTraxx Před 2 lety +19

      @@joythought Thanks Joy. My point is that when a vehicle such as a tank is put in long time storage there are all kinds of problems .. rubber seals dry out, fittings start leaking. If the vehicle is not stored in a dry desert type area then you start getting corrosion. I remember one time late on a Friday fuel started to pour out of one of our tanks .. then another .. and another. It turned out that the hose clamps that connected to the fuel tank were not flat but had corrugations which snapped all at once on three or four tanks within 15 minutes .. had to do with the heating and cooling there in the Texas moonpool. That was on tanks we worked on regularly. A vehicle that has been stored and is to get running again needs lots of thought about how to store it properly. Not impossible .. just not a park and leave kind of thing.

    • @doomguyslowresolutionmodel407
      @doomguyslowresolutionmodel407 Před 2 lety +7

      Russia's mass conscripting so they can't even bother to teach their draftees all this stuff

  • @laurencehugo5910
    @laurencehugo5910 Před 2 lety +3

    Great clip, I'm amazed by your research and insight on the topic. Thanks!

  • @feszty
    @feszty Před 2 lety +4

    You are very generous. I think it’s more like 25% of those stored tanks that are usable. Most likely the parts that can be sold, such as engine parts, optics, etc. are all but gone in all of them.

  • @stuartburton1167
    @stuartburton1167 Před 2 lety +235

    I once worked for a company that dealt in ex British Army vehicles. Some vehicles had been stored for up to 10 years before being sold off at auction. The vehicles that had been stored for a long time could only be sold for parts or scrap, they would need a major rebuild to be runners

    • @mardbenzmura1446
      @mardbenzmura1446 Před 2 lety +51

      So is it safe to say that Russia has realistically only 3,000 tanks, 500 of which were smoked in Ukraine?

    • @AttackHelicopter64
      @AttackHelicopter64 Před 2 lety +46

      @@mardbenzmura1446 and ~200 captured

    • @erickajander1799
      @erickajander1799 Před 2 lety +4

      SIR I DID A 100% REWIRE of a 1964 ,(military) BRITISH LAND ROVER , 4 cylinder , carburetor, , 4 wheel drive. ALL WELDED SQUARE STEEL TUBE FRAME , ALUMINUM , RIVETED CAB , MANUAL TRAN S MISSION X REBUILT CARBURETOR , STARTER + D.C. GENERATOR .....AMAZING FIT OF PARTS , PERFECT MACHING. CLUTCH HAD A "DONUT" (HOLE IN CENTER) HYDRAULIC PISTON (SLAVE) OPERATED BY HYDRAULIC CLUTCH PEDAL , 100% EVEN PRESSURE ON CLUTCH DISC ( NO OFFSET CLUTCH "FORK" ) PERFECT FIT OF ALUMINUM INTAKE TO CYLENDER HEAD TO CARBURETOR ( MAXIMUM AIR FLOW ) ....REWIRED REBUILT IN 1975 IN KELLOGG. IDAHO.

    • @zhangzy123
      @zhangzy123 Před 2 lety +39

      In 2000, I was drafted into the Polish Army. These were times when there was still a lot of post-Soviet war doctrine. I remember being in a big truck warehouse. The soldier who worked there said half would not leave. If something went wrong, they took parts from another truck, some of the truck parts were probably sold for vodka. Today is different times, everything has changed. I know it's better, it's not perfect, but it's not like it was then. Things are even worse in the Russian army. I suspect that half of the equipment in stock needs to be repaired or is scrapped.

    • @DaaronIrwing
      @DaaronIrwing Před 2 lety +17

      - 500 were gifts to Sirian goverment.

  • @angushogg3667
    @angushogg3667 Před 2 lety +889

    In a sea of pathetic and worthless videos, this one is simply outstanding. Informed, rational, measured and researched - it does not get any better than this. Well done.

    • @rtqii
      @rtqii Před 2 lety +8

      I have been recommending it to people watching war updates on several channels. The quality is demonstrated in the views... 1.1 million in 3.5 days.

    • @JohnHill-qo3hb
      @JohnHill-qo3hb Před 2 lety +25

      And most important, no robot voice over, how refreshing.

    • @patmaloney5735
      @patmaloney5735 Před 2 lety +7

      the farmer joke comment is still ahead in likes... that explains the video dispartiy

    • @genekalutsky8813
      @genekalutsky8813 Před 2 lety +6

      Typical propaganda bot comment. Try harder, bot!

    • @KidoKoin
      @KidoKoin Před 2 lety +8

      Yes! I might have shed a tear, when he said, that he went looking for storage bases along the railroad network manually. After so many numbers thrown around mindlessly!

  • @petterivirtanen6376
    @petterivirtanen6376 Před 2 lety +8

    Pretty much almost every country would have like "millions" of rusty old tanks if they would store them like that, put there are many reasons why it's not a commom practice. Everyone who understands something about machines can only imagine in what kind of shape those tanks are.

  • @ATRestoration
    @ATRestoration Před 2 lety +6

    It´s like one of those guys who are hoarding cars. "Yes, one day I will repair them all"... but they never do.

  • @WTH1812
    @WTH1812 Před 2 lety +183

    A major failure of Russian tanks and other equipment was the lack of preventive maintenance. Much of their equipment simply broke down. And with many parts only made in Ukraine or in sanctioned countries there was a shortage of replacement parts.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Před 2 lety +31

      yup sensitive electronics was often made in ukraine.

    • @russellpeter8620
      @russellpeter8620 Před 2 lety +20

      Hahaha...the irrrony!!!

    • @maci6962
      @maci6962 Před 2 lety +11

      "Much of their equipment simply broke down." Not exactly. The parts,and the fuel was stolen :D

    • @eVill420
      @eVill420 Před 2 lety +3

      not just that, they can't get parts from Taiwan, South Korea or Japan either that they would usually rely on and I doubt China has the production capabilities to make modern electronics yet, those take a shit ton of money and time to get

    • @JG-id5vi
      @JG-id5vi Před 2 lety +9

      Also, When people think of the ww2 Russian military they forget that those tanks were rolling off the assembly line onto the battlefield. They weren't sitting around in a field for 20-30 years

  • @the7observer
    @the7observer Před 2 lety +27

    8:40 - the whole maintenance nightmare of having too many tank different variants reminds me of Germany in WW2

    • @hamletksquid2702
      @hamletksquid2702 Před 2 lety +1

      It reminds me of my first car, a 1973 Toyota Corona. It was one of the first ones produced that year, and it was made out of leftovers from a few '72 models, like the engine from a 72 Celica with a wiring harness from a Corolla and instruments and sensors from a few other models. New parts never fit, and I'd have to keep taking them back and guessing at a different model to order for. T72's and such have to be like that, too.

  • @AFITgrad86
    @AFITgrad86 Před rokem +1

    Thank you .. good video and it reflects a good deal of research on your part.

  • @vickomen3697
    @vickomen3697 Před rokem

    the work you do to give us these amazing info. Absolutely crazy. Thanks a lot.

  • @jakkernsa
    @jakkernsa Před 2 lety +131

    Well it doesn't matter if they have 80.000 tanks available. If they keep feeding them unsupported and under supplied single file into the meatgrinder any army on the planet will suffer extreme losses. Combined arms and good logistics is key.

    • @valentinius62
      @valentinius62 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes. Astonishing, isn't it. Guess they are unfamiliar with the 19th and 18th century concept of the cavalry screen?🙄

    • @andreivaldez2929
      @andreivaldez2929 Před 2 lety +3

      This conflict has shown how important logistics are.

    • @JESUSCHRIST-ONLYWAYTOHEAVEN
      @JESUSCHRIST-ONLYWAYTOHEAVEN Před 2 lety

      JESUS KNOCKS ON YOUR HEART AND LONGS FOR YOU TO ANSWER! HE DOESN'T WANT TO SEE ANYONE PERISH INTO HELL. GOD LOVES YOU SO HE GIVES YOU FREE WILL AND A CHOICE TO ACCEPT HIM OR REJECT HIM. TO LOVE HIM OR TO LOVE SIN/THIS WORLD. CALL UPON JESUS & ASK HIM TO FORGIVE YOUR SINS! SURRENDER YOUR WILL & YOUR LIFE TO HIM & HE WILL GIVE YOU ETERNAL LIFE IN HEAVEN! PICTURE YOUR BEST DAY ON EARTH TIMES A BILLION FOR ETERNITY, THAT'S HEAVEN! NOW PICTURE YOUR WORST DAY ON EARTH TIMES A BILLION FOR ETERNITY, THAT'S HELL! HE WILL GIVE YOU WHAT YOU WANT SO IF YOU REJECT HIM YOU WILL BE SEPARATED FROM HIM & HIS BLESSINGS (LOVE, PEACE, JOY, HOPE, REST, ETC). IN HELL YOU WILL BE ALONE WITHOUT GOD OR PEOPLE... YOU WILL BE HOPELESS, IN DESPAIR & AGONY FOREVER!
      GOD'S STANDARD FOR HEAVEN IS PERFECTION AND ONLY JESUS (THE SON OF GOD/GOD IN THE FLESH) LIVED THAT PERFECT LIFE! HE LAID DOWN HIS LIFE & TOOK THE WRATH OF THE FATHER ON THE CROSS FOR YOUR SINS! GOD IS JUST SO HE MUST PUNISH SIN & HE IS HOLY SO NO SIN CAN ENTER HIS KINGDOM OF HEAVEN. IF YOU ARE IN CHRIST ON JUDGEMENT DAY GOD WILL SEE YOU AS HIS PERFECT SON (SINLESS SINCE YOUR SINS ARE COVERED BY JESUS' OFFERING). YOU CAN ALSO CHOOSE TO REJECT JESUS' GIFT/SACRIFICE & PAY FOR YOUR OWN SIN WITH DEATH (HELL) BUT THAT SEEMS PRETTY FOOLISH! GOD SEES & HEARS EVERYTHING YOU HAVE SAID & DONE. YOU WONT WIN AN ARGUMENT WITH HIM & YOU CANT DEFEND ANY OF YOUR SINS TO HIM. YOU'RE NOT A GOOD PERSON, I'M NOT A GOOD PERSON... ONLY GOD IS GOOD! WE'RE ALL GUILTY WITHOUT ACCEPTING JESUS' SACRIFICE FOR OUR SINS!
      MUHAMMAD DIDN'T DIE FOR YOUR SINS, BUDDHA DIDN'T DIE FOR YOUR SINS, NO PASTOR/NO PRIEST/NO SAINT/NO ANCESTOR DIED FOR YOUR SINS, MARY DIDN'T DIE FOR YOUR SINS, NO IDOLS OR FALSE gods DIED FOR YOUR SINS, NO MUSICIAN OR CELEBRITY DIED FOR YOUR SINS, NO INFLUENCER OR CZcams STAR DIED FOR YOUR SINS, NO SCIENTIST OR POLITICIAN DIED FOR YOUR SINS, NO ATHLETE OR ACTOR DIED FOR YOUR SINS! STOP WORSHIPING THESE PEOPLE!
      JESUS CHRIST ALONE DIED FOR YOUR SINS & WAS RESURRECTED FROM THE GRAVE! HE IS ALIVE & COMING BACK VERY SOON WITH JUDGEMENT (THESE ARE END TIMES)! PREPARE YOURSELVES, TURN FROM SIN & RUN TO JESUS! HE KNOWS YOUR PAIN & TROUBLES, HE WANTS TO HEAL & RESTORE YOU! TALK TO HIM LIKE A BEST FRIEND! ASK HIM TO REVEAL HIMSELF TO YOU & HELP YOU TO BELIEVE IF YOU DOUBT! DON'T WAIT TO CRY OUT! NO ONE IS PROMISED TOMORROW! HE LONGS FOR YOU TO INVITE HIM IN, HE LOVES YOU MORE THAN ANY PERSON EVER COULD, HE CREATED YOU!
      Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."-John 14:6
      "But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven."-Matthew 10:33
      “For the wages of sin is death (hell), but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord”-Romans 6:23

    • @SnowHawkX
      @SnowHawkX Před 2 lety +12

      @@andreivaldez2929 Every military conflict in human history has shown how important logistics are

    • @saumyacow4435
      @saumyacow4435 Před 2 lety

      Which is why I asked the question about what are the logistical bottlenecks to actually getting new tanks into Ukraine.

  • @HeartcoreMitRA
    @HeartcoreMitRA Před 2 lety +608

    One of important point you've missed - we have notorious corruption in our army. And lots, LOTS of weaponry that's stored in all these bases are most likely been disassembled to pieces and inoperable - it's mostly just a pile of metal. The engine parts, electronic equipment, sights, systems - are slowly salvaged to pieces and sold. There are lots of jokes around army corruption and it's well-known thing. Recently a tank batallion commander shot himself after he found out none of the tanks from reserve in his base are able to move. The thing is - you can't have a country with total degradation of all sectors and hope that one exact sector will avoid it. Healthcare, education, industry - all been steadily degrading. There's quite a few people calling not to be scared of potential nuclear conflict cause likely our nuclear powers might be inoperable.
    The recent loss of "Moskva" flagship is quite indicative too. And it's a huge hit on the morale of militarized people, who support this massacre and compensate their poor life conditions with an idea of how scary we are to the rest of the world.

    • @OHFORPEATSAKES
      @OHFORPEATSAKES Před 2 lety +75

      Excellent point.
      Hope the war ends soon.
      Peace.

    • @johnnyonthespot4375
      @johnnyonthespot4375 Před 2 lety +55

      I grew up with the idea that all Russian military fighters are 15 feet tall & fully equipped for any fight.
      What is happening is just confusing.
      HAPPY confusing but confusing nonetheless.

    • @axinteandrei2407
      @axinteandrei2407 Před 2 lety +53

      Yea! I look at the comments on Ria Novosti and I get scared of how the russian psiche works. They are not outraged by the killing and rapes, but by the fact the army retreated from Kyiv.

    • @HeartcoreMitRA
      @HeartcoreMitRA Před 2 lety +94

      @@johnnyonthespot4375 lots of people here still believe our army is so powerful, despite the fact it's obviously not. And weirdly, they combine all the jokes and stories about overwhelming corruprion in lots of shows, movies and media and belief that our army is the strongest in the world and just ignore all the info about huge losses in this idiotic war. Furthermore, Alexey Arestovich pointed that at this rate soon Russia will loose all of its fight-capable army and will be left with thousands of rusty and disassembled tanks and thousands of people who admire the war sitting on the couch and would never pick up weapon and go somewhere to protect their ideas. This situation will leave the country in extremely voulnerable state where lots of Russian territories could be brought back to it's "historical origin" effortlessly.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns Před 2 lety

      @@HeartcoreMitRA They probably rationale that the reports of corruption and bloated prices in e.g. the American military industrial sector has the same effect as the kind of cleptocratic corruption in Russia. Of course not. You still have to produce and deliver a million of those $100 titanium screws, and they will be installed in a working combat vehicle of some kind. Western corruption is selling things expensively, and giving cutbacks to the politicians funding you. Russian corruption is taking the money without delivering anything.

  • @TheBuhrewnoShow
    @TheBuhrewnoShow Před 2 lety

    7:37 I like how they have a cheerleader to play an accordion for them while they make repairs

  • @tpxchallenger
    @tpxchallenger Před 2 lety +1

    Great research! I'm wondering how long this took to put together and if Covert Cabal reads Russian.
    Subscribed!

  • @dj1NM3
    @dj1NM3 Před 2 lety +302

    I would hazard a guess that every tank we can see that has a "black circle" instead of a visible turret in the satellite imagery is in fact missing its turret and most likely the whole interior has been exposed to the elements via that gaping hole, so are extremely unlikely to be repairable.

    • @1032ramos
      @1032ramos Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/zT7mMm0d0aw/video.html

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Před 2 lety

      And most probably those covered by tarp are just cardboard boxes - they took money for tanks from putler and bought yachts instead. On a satellite u see a shape means nothing in rwality

    • @tsugumorihoney2288
      @tsugumorihoney2288 Před 2 lety +1

      @Kaiser Meme newest of T-72B3 can use old hull and put new turret and interior

    • @CzechMirco
      @CzechMirco Před 2 lety +6

      @@tsugumorihoney2288 Especially the interior equipment, all the electronic, cables, etc. sounds about as time consuming and costly as building a new tank from scratch.

    • @PeterJavi
      @PeterJavi Před 2 lety +6

      @@CzechMirco repairing a badly serviced tank is far more time consuming than building a new one from the ground up (assuming it's not a completely new type of tank).
      Servicing tanks is just not remotely fun, or time efficient. Keeping a tank operational already costs a hilarious amount of manhours and that's only if someone uses the damn thing at least a couple of hours a week

  • @BW022
    @BW022 Před 2 lety +305

    Great research. Unfortunately, you also have to ask the question... how many trained tankers do you have? I had a friend would as an M1 guy in the First Gulf War, and he said the amount of money in ammo they spent per tanker was staggering. A few minutes at the range could be tens of thousands of dollars, and large scale exercises would be in the hundreds of thousands (1990s) per crew. He said that Russians on average often only fired 5 rounds per year per crew.
    If you bring even 1,000 tanks out of storage, who runs them? Taking some 50-year-old who hasn't fired a shell in 15 years... no so effective.

    • @EatMyShortsAU
      @EatMyShortsAU Před 2 lety +82

      I would say a lot less tankers now. Russia has probably lost a lot of its main tanks and tank crews but could probably scrap together replacement tanks and crews. They will probably be less capable tanks and tankers whilst the Ukrainians will be waiting for them with TB2s, Switchblades, Nlaws, Skifs, artilley, Javelins etc high on confidence from the amount tanks they have destroyed. Actually uKRAINE does not really destroys single tanks they destroy columns of 3, 5, 10 vehicles at a time.

    • @galimbertino4939
      @galimbertino4939 Před 2 lety +13

      @@EatMyShortsAU Ukrainians bot...

    • @EatMyShortsAU
      @EatMyShortsAU Před 2 lety

      @@galimbertino4939 Okay bro, there are dozens if not hundreds of videos and photos of Russian loses. Go to Oryx to see them. Soviet era tanks and vehicles are no match for 21st century western tech.
      No.. no.. sorry I am wrong.. Russia is a great super power they strategically withdrew from Kiev and their Black Sea flagship magically caught on fire and all those videos and photos are western propaganda. Tsar Putin #1. Lol what kind of propaganda are you on?
      P.s Armenia and its Soviet Era weaponry got pumped in Nogorno-Karabakh.

    • @nikola12nis
      @nikola12nis Před 2 lety +9

      @@EatMyShortsAU bullshit lmfao

    • @EatMyShortsAU
      @EatMyShortsAU Před 2 lety

      @@nikola12nis Yeah bro everything is bullshit Russia is number 1. Sleep well tonight. P.s I am guessing by your name you are Serbian. Serbians are pretty smart do your own research(on both sides) let me know your conclusion. We are being fed a lot of western propaganda and are restricted from Russian propaganda but it does not look good on the Russia side..

  • @teotwaki
    @teotwaki Před rokem

    That was a great video. Thank you!

  • @AlbCaphalor
    @AlbCaphalor Před 2 lety

    Great work done! Thx for the video

  • @jameshoiby
    @jameshoiby Před 2 lety +130

    Quite a time we live in that a random person sitting at home can do a satellite reconnaissance to create a force estimate of a major military power.

    • @stephenarbon2227
      @stephenarbon2227 Před 2 lety +5

      except the ones left out in the open thru Russian winters, are the ones only kept for parts, or waiting for some one to authorise their disposal for scrap. Anything still viable would be kept under cover and not see-able from satelite.

    • @orangephoenixbrazier4978
      @orangephoenixbrazier4978 Před 2 lety +27

      @@stephenarbon2227 I think you’re giving Russia too much credit.

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 Před 2 lety +5

      @@orangephoenixbrazier4978 I think you do the old "I underestimate my enemy" trick.
      All the numbers we have about destroyed vehicles are Ukrainian propaganda numbers. Do not make the same mistake the Russians do in believing your own propaganda.
      All the numbers we have of Russians tanks being in storage (by simply some dude analyzing Google Maps) aren´t necessary correct either.

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 Před 2 lety +6

      @@sierraecho884 no, we have more than Ukrainian propaganda.
      There are lists that only take confirmed destroyed vehicles into consideration. (confirmed means there are pictures of the destroyed vehicle available)

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Jehty21 And who made this "list" ? Was this list being checked by multiple sources ? In short how credible is this source ?
      We can only guesstemate. Both war parties use the same type of vehicles. It is not that easy to distinguish the loses.
      BTW what kind of loses do the UA have ? Do we also have a list ? Do they even share their loses in detail ?

  • @dansands8140
    @dansands8140 Před 2 lety +115

    Remember kids: Wealth isn't 10,000 tanks in a garage or 10 million tons of wood in a warehouse. Wealth is 1000 new tanks a year and a million tons of wood production. Things in storage degrade and become obsolete. They represent waste in the system.

    • @thirstyserpent1079
      @thirstyserpent1079 Před 2 lety +5

      Was that an AOE2/Rise of Nations reference? xD

    • @alexalbrecht5768
      @alexalbrecht5768 Před 2 lety +5

      This man has never played Stellaris lol. Is a valid point though

    • @Lasagnaisprettycool
      @Lasagnaisprettycool Před 2 lety +2

      @Dan shhhhhh don't tell them

    • @janwitts2688
      @janwitts2688 Před 2 lety

      This is usually true

    • @kennethferland5579
      @kennethferland5579 Před 2 lety +1

      Might be a bit better to say that efficiency and resiliency area a trade off. Having a stockpile is less efficient because of degredation, but it helps you to survive a shock and makes you resilient. Russia's grand strategy is cleary to be resilient rather then efficieny, but this only works if the shock is brief, not sustained and this war is getting longer every day.

  • @fatefinger
    @fatefinger Před 2 lety +10

    There is a difference between a combat ready tank, a tank in reserve that can be made combat ready (which takes time and resources the russians may not have) and tanks that are in boneyards that are only good for parts.

    • @DenOfTen
      @DenOfTen Před rokem

      Russia is different in that if resources, people and time are needed. Women will go and the disabled will go for machines and will produce both bombs and tanks. But all this is bullshit when there are missiles capable of flying 2 times the globe with a radius of destruction the size of Britain.

  • @barbeonline351
    @barbeonline351 Před rokem +2

    Yo, dude!
    Knock, knock!
    Time to update this (great) video.
    Can you find fresh satellite images to see how emptied out all those "storage depots" are at this point?
    Can you find where tanks have been moved forward, but are still held in reserve?
    See if the Russians pulling from these reserves shows some "sorting" to help confirm what proportion of the original inventory are inoperable/parts-only versions?
    Give us some idea of the logistics required to pull a tank from the respective sites and on into battle?
    And, of course, anything else you spot along the way.
    Knowing inventory right now would be crucial as I am sure pressure to start negotiations will increase as we move toward winter.
    Thanks

  • @WOTArtyNoobs
    @WOTArtyNoobs Před 2 lety +147

    The biggest problem that the Russian Army has is that their design engineers incorporated a fatal flaw in the design of all T-72. T-80 and T-90 tanks. The carousel for the ammunition almost guarantees a one shot kill on these tanks. This was very evident in the Gulf Wars where the Iraqis fielded export versions of the T-72. The Abrams tanks had no problem destroying these tanks outside the range at which they could reply. Modern ATGW only make it worse because they exploit the weakness of the top armor over the turret and engine deck. So it really does not matter how many tanks the Russians have in reserve if they can be defeated by armor and man portable weapons.
    I understand that many of the reserve tanks had their engines removed and stacked separately from the older tanks. Due to Russia's climate, these engines and hulls rusted over many years and despite being greased, they have still deteriorated. I doubt that any of the T-54, T-55 and T-62 are capable of being restored. Many of the best were gifted to other nations as surplus because they were thought obsolete when the T-72 was mass produced. However, the design flaw in the T-72 only became evident after Russia had committed to building vast numbers. The T-80 and T-90 were supposed to correct those mistakes with active systems to block ATGW, but these were nothing more than a way of reassuring the crews that they would live in a hostile environment, much like the 'cope-cages' recently fitted to try and defeat Javelin and NLAW. These systems do not work and Russian tanks would likely not survive contact with a NATO tank.
    The Russian tank bogeyman is made of straw. Even the T-14 is incapable against NATO weapons systems. Russia has not fielded them because they need to sell them abroad and they cannot do that if they are soundly defeated in battle - especially as the Ukrainians seem to have access to all the ATGW they need.

    • @hhkk6155
      @hhkk6155 Před 2 lety +9

      You missed one fact, Russia defeated Germany who's tanks were a lot better, with lesser quality tanks but higher numbers of them. Also Russia has ATGWs too

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 2 lety +4

      ukraine lost tank to

    • @mr.c.3760
      @mr.c.3760 Před 2 lety +25

      @@hhkk6155 it doesn't matter if it turns to scrap as soon as it meats a Javelin. Russia has NO comparable javelins

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 2 lety

      @@bluecheesehasmoldinit ukrain also have 6.000 tank . in 1992. and 6.000. nucler bom in 1992

    • @raptorteam486
      @raptorteam486 Před 2 lety +4

      I mean top-attack is the mongoose to any tank, even with blast doors it'll most likely hit the crew rather the ammo.

  • @vipondiu
    @vipondiu Před 2 lety +14

    7:31 You know he is a professional tank mechanic when you see him strapping in the Russian Army's Tactical Acordeon Mk V before proceding to engine bay inspection

    • @MrChizu11
      @MrChizu11 Před 2 lety

      no he's playing it so that the tank feels better

  • @stephenmayer9228
    @stephenmayer9228 Před 2 lety +1

    7:33 the most costly thing about tank maintenance is lulling it to sleep with the gentle sounds of accordionists.

  • @taddscoins1130
    @taddscoins1130 Před rokem +2

    Can you please do an update to this video with the current Russian losses with how many tanks are really left?

  • @paulheinen4765
    @paulheinen4765 Před 2 lety +65

    A Leopard 2 A6 engine is replaced within an hour. The engine of a T 72 is estimated at over 10 hours with good mechanics. The Russian main battle tank with crew is mass-produced, high losses are accepted. The training of the crew cannot be compared with the very high standard of the NATO armored units.

    • @Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek
      @Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek Před 2 lety +1

      A leopard is a German tank tho?

    • @ChucksSEADnDEAD
      @ChucksSEADnDEAD Před 2 lety

      Accepting losses is a false economy. A crew cooking inside a T-72 is money and time pissed away. A poorly trained crew means they'll lose the tank before it even reaches combat.

    • @SnowHawkX
      @SnowHawkX Před 2 lety +9

      @@Shrekfromthehitmovieshrek Yes, and?

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 2 lety

      true, they out-tanked WW2 germany in eastern front, but also due to elongated supply lines of germans, no spare parts and that familiar story. But crew morale is other thing... seems high mercenary army or patriotic cause could stir up that, both very difficult to achieve these days.

    • @mweskamppp
      @mweskamppp Před 2 lety +3

      I have seen an engine replacement in 20 minutes. But usually they work a bit slower.

  • @mikeynth7919
    @mikeynth7919 Před 2 lety +221

    My WAG is that there are a lot of tanks on inventory lists, but of those tanks many have been cannibalized for spare parts and many others are inoperative hulks. Maintenance hasn't been a priority for the Russian military for a long time, it seems.

    • @thirstyserpent1079
      @thirstyserpent1079 Před 2 lety

      There was Allegedly/apparently a scandal this past month when the Russian's started trying to do maintenance to reactivate mothballed tanks in which it was found at one depot only like 1 in 10 tanks were even potentially operational due to the vast majority being stripped to the bones of parts due to corruption. Some general got in trouble and the kremlin quietly buried any info on it.

    • @Tank50us
      @Tank50us Před 2 lety +6

      It's also likely the stated number is for the more loose definition of a tank, Is, big metal thing with tracks and a BA Gun.to that end, many of their IFVs could count.

    • @neilhands1708
      @neilhands1708 Před 2 lety +26

      Maybe Russia has masses of military equipment that makes them look strong on paper, but that's meaningless if they cannot be used.

    • @yaswaterworld3119
      @yaswaterworld3119 Před 2 lety

      A lot of the money allocated to equipment purchases have been stolen by corrupt russian officers in recent years, that is one of the reasons why they are running low on supplies.

    • @gerrycrisostomo6571
      @gerrycrisostomo6571 Před 2 lety +17

      True. And take note here that most of those tanks are from the 70, 80's, and 90's designs and are not equal to most Western tanks. Also, their only tank manufacturing plant, Ural Vagonzavod stopped producing tanks because of the lack of parts, especially electronics, sensors, and microchips that are imported from the West. So because of the sanctions, it will be difficult for the Russians to replace the tanks, smart munitions and other equipment that were destroyed or captured by Ukraine in battle.

  • @royalkingdomcommando72

    Thank you for your video!

  • @christophercharles9645

    Whoa, that's a lot of satellite images to pour through - I hope you had your magnifying glass handy! Nice work on the tallying.

  • @vejet
    @vejet Před 2 lety +5

    7:39 Nice to see the units accordion player taking his job seriously! It's not a good tank maintenance crew without one.

  • @rosegreensummer
    @rosegreensummer Před 2 lety +45

    "Why does Russia hold onto so many old tanks?" I watch a lot of decluttering videos, and there's this idea of hoarding your Fantasy Self - all that wood you're going to woodwork, all those suits you're going to wear when you one day get another office job again - Russia is hoarding it's fantasy army! I wouldn't advise decluttering though, Siberia's pretty big and especially older tanks might have useful iron etc you can always sell for scrap.

    • @caxopog
      @caxopog Před 2 lety +3

      I think every army does. The thing is - USSR produced A LOT OF TANKS. Really A LOT. And if NATO have money to replace them, Russia haven't

    • @prajwalfyawali2275
      @prajwalfyawali2275 Před rokem

      I am not from Europe but old tanks are needed in losing condition for war of country them may help to fight for some period it's is actually smart decision by countries like USA Russia and China like this

    • @user-no1hs3st7g
      @user-no1hs3st7g Před rokem

      А зачем их утилизировать....они как оборонительные орудия, очень годны... На все остальное, ест ядерное оружие... Мы ни на кого не собирались нападать....а если уж и случилось бы нападение на нас, то тут нет смысла в новых танках с большим серийным выпуском .

  • @adamgarrison4737
    @adamgarrison4737 Před 2 lety

    Wow, that was great work. You found a simple answer to a simple question, when the answer is actually complex.

  • @purpleldv966
    @purpleldv966 Před 2 lety +6

    Fields of rusty hulls, in one shape or an other is one thing... But supplying all the sensitive electronics that a tank needs in order tu function, like targeting scopes, thermal sensors, night vision, ballistics computers, communications, etc... As specially now when Rusia has restrictions in acquiring these kinds of equipment (or components for producing them) from abroad... now that's a whole different thing!

  • @marcin8676
    @marcin8676 Před 2 lety +197

    A large group of Russian soldiers in the border area in 2022 are moving down a road when they hear a voice call from behind a small hill: "One Ukrainian soldier is better than ten Russian". The Russian commander quickly orders 10 of his best men over the hill where Upon a gun-battle breaks out and continues for a few minutes, then silence. The voice once again calls out: "One Ukraine is better than one hundred Russians." Furious, the Russian commander sends his next best 100 troops over the hill and instantly a huge gun fight commences. After 10 minutes of battle, again Silence. The calm Ukrainian voice calls out again: "One Ukraine is better than one thousand Russians: The enraged Russian commander musters 1000 fighters and sends them to the other side of the hill. Rifle fire, machine guns, grenades, rockets and cannon fire ring out as a terrible battle is fought... Then silence. Eventually one badly wounded Russian fighter crawls back over the hill and with his dying words tells his commander, "Don't send any more men...it's a trap. There's two of them."

    • @dwightanderson8331
      @dwightanderson8331 Před 2 lety +7

      PRICELESS STORY!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @johntomasini3916
      @johntomasini3916 Před 2 lety +6

      Oldie but a goody.

    • @johnnyonthespot4375
      @johnnyonthespot4375 Před 2 lety +1

      Bravo Sir - If that doesn't personify the Ukrainian position I don't know what would.
      & a Helluva good chuckle too!

    • @souravsen5773
      @souravsen5773 Před 2 lety +1

      So people try to become happy by reading BS jokes.

    • @ronnieeubanks6559
      @ronnieeubanks6559 Před 2 lety +2

      Damn that was hilarious 😂 🤣🤣🤣

  • @oskar6661
    @oskar6661 Před 2 lety +213

    It's nice to see someone mention the lack of modern production to keep up. It's an often overlooked issued of modern combat. In the 1970's my father's carrier with its several fighter squadrons had an active combat expectation of around 28 days before they expected all aircraft to be lost or down for maintenance, etc. The same would be said of armoured units. In a real, full-blown shooting war, most major combatants would plow through their modern equipment and ammunition with frightening speed. While we see the tremendous impact of ATGMs, etc...those are so vastly more expensive/time consuming than something like a simple bazooka round, etc. Major super powers would deplete eachother's conventional forces with alarming speed - heading to either a quicker cessation of hostilities by treaty...or the unfortunate other option; nuclear war.

    • @Liguehunters
      @Liguehunters Před 2 lety +9

      I agree .
      In WW2 the Allies alone built over 600.000 Aircraft
      The Axis also about 200.000.
      Imagine something even close like that with modern planes

    • @thelitsquad2718
      @thelitsquad2718 Před 2 lety +4

      The US currently can produce 7000 javelins a year.. I imagine that would be scaled up pretty substantially

    • @Liguehunters
      @Liguehunters Před 2 lety +6

      @@thelitsquad2718 If I am informed correctly the USA currently produces about 1500 Javelins a Year. Their Stocks are said to be almost halved because of the war. The Source i have seen has the Maximum Capacity of about 6000 a Year.

    • @-BuddyGuy
      @-BuddyGuy Před 2 lety

      In a full blown war manufacturing is repurposed for the military. Within 6 years in WW2 they were all making new versions of everything, with designs modified to suit manufacturability during war

    • @Liguehunters
      @Liguehunters Před 2 lety +3

      @@-BuddyGuy Yes but somethings are too technologically advanced and expensive for mass production like in WW2

  • @thebookwasbetter3650
    @thebookwasbetter3650 Před 2 lety

    4:25 - wow, a tank landfill! Great video!

  • @Daz555Daz
    @Daz555Daz Před 2 lety +2

    Russia has a military budget roughly the same as the UK. Not a chance are Russia maintaining 2500 main battle ranks with an overall budget like that. Same goes for their airforce.

  • @idkwhattomakemyname101
    @idkwhattomakemyname101 Před 2 lety +135

    I was about o get in the comment section like “well we don’t see them because they’re defending the rest of Russia and this and that but your argument that they just don’t have 10k tanks makes more sense especially with your research and explanation of hard it would be to build and maintain modern tanks. Thanks for making educated and researched videos so jackasses like me are forced to use the common sense part of their brain 🤣

    • @sadrussiansoldier8223
      @sadrussiansoldier8223 Před 2 lety +1

      All n ot true, our tanks are so good they are still running after 50 years. Really.

    • @hawkeye7527
      @hawkeye7527 Před 2 lety +16

      @Beam Team Says the random internet guy who made zero effort to validate his claim

    • @tomitiustritus6672
      @tomitiustritus6672 Před 2 lety +10

      It's worse. Your argument is true, on top of the shrinked stockpile. Literally everything Russia can mobilize without mass mobilization (difficult if it's just a "special operation" and would take 3 month minimum to mobilize reservist units and get them trained and orgsnized, if their logistics can handle it.) or stripping large parts of the country from its defenses is alreads mobilized. The garrisons in the russian heartland (the actual Russia. I have a friend from the border region to Kazakhstan and he keeps laughing at the russian nationalists and theit slogans. "What do you mean, 'Russia for the Russians?' You're more than 500 km away from the eastern tip of Russia.") must be able to defend agsinst incursions and the Kaliningrad garrison is the most central piece of Russias NATO-Strategy. How do the americans say? Russia is "A day late and a dollar short".
      Don't mind the Russians in the comments. I have a lot of russian friends i love dearly, but the "Russia and russian stuff is objectively better than anything the other dwarf countries can do"-brain worm is real. Most of them rarely reflect on why their families came to western Europe if thats true and most just live in denial that Russias total GDP is smaller than that of Italy. Which i don't mean disparagingly. There is nothing wrong with being a regular country among equals. They just have a hard time accepting Russia isn't commanding a global empire anymor

  • @jantschierschky3461
    @jantschierschky3461 Před 2 lety +142

    When I was in Russia 10 years ago, I seen 100s of APCs in a field rusting away. Many could not be refurbish.

    • @RickySpanish12344
      @RickySpanish12344 Před 2 lety +10

      You know what's funny, is that if they were actually smart they could sell some of them off to collectors and actually make some money off of them instead of them just becoming a huge waste of metal.

    • @joshh535
      @joshh535 Před 2 lety +1

      You "seen"? Lmfao sorry bud, but it doesn't sound like you've seen (correct usage here) the inside of a book.... I wouldn't trust your opinion on whether or not those APCs you "seen" could be refurbished and brought back into service.

    • @joshh535
      @joshh535 Před 2 lety +1

      @Kaiser Meme could have****.... as in, "you could have paid attention in English class, then you would have noticed that "could of" is just an uneducated person trying to spell out the contraction "could've" without realizing that it's a contraction and is actually the combination of the 2 words "could have".

    • @jantschierschky3461
      @jantschierschky3461 Před 2 lety +13

      @@joshh535 well I am ex army and yes I know when gear like that is wasted. You may can refurbish, however the amount of time you would need is not cost effective. So don't be a smart arse, btw English is my second language, how many do you speak ?

    • @user-tr4ej8mw4s
      @user-tr4ej8mw4s Před 2 lety

      @@joshh535 lol, another homeschooled grammar nazi. Haven't seen one in a while. Thought the likes of you have died out already. But no, you keep correcting peopke in an arrogant way while embarrassing yourself. Do you know that people around the world mostly speak english as their 2nd, 3rd, 4th language? You really are pathetic low-life individual without any self esteem.

  •  Před 2 lety

    Very interesting Video. Thank you for putting in the Work :)

  • @RorikH
    @RorikH Před 2 lety

    Great video. Impressive use of actual research.

  • @stupoc6715
    @stupoc6715 Před 2 lety +51

    I like how part of the maintenance performed, includes playing the accordion to it. 7:31
    I worked next door to a General Dynamics site that refurbished the Abrams tanks .They would unload/ load them on railcars on the other side of our building.

    • @simonic2063
      @simonic2063 Před 2 lety +14

      Searched the comments for this. While watching I had to rewind..."does that guy have an accordion...yup." While USA mechanics are blasting heavy/death metal.

    • @Western_1
      @Western_1 Před 2 lety +5

      The Omnissiah is pleased at the sound of an accordion. The machine god must be satiated.

    • @LordAlacorn
      @LordAlacorn Před 2 lety +6

      You need to keep the Machine Spirit high!

    • @Megalomaniakaal
      @Megalomaniakaal Před 2 lety +2

      @@Western_1 Unexpected 40K reference. But a welcome one.

  • @alexandruraresdatcu
    @alexandruraresdatcu Před 2 lety +20

    7:34 Nice to see the maintenance done with accordion... Does it make the tank happy or will the engine run better?

    • @jefftheriault5522
      @jefftheriault5522 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah, I was wondering too. Singing the valves into proper clearance perhaps? Seating the air filter with harmonics?

    • @legodragonxp
      @legodragonxp Před 2 lety +4

      That is Normal Alinov Yankovich working on the polka timing gear.

    • @karbengo
      @karbengo Před 2 lety +1

      To appease the machine spirit.

    • @ChucksSEADnDEAD
      @ChucksSEADnDEAD Před 2 lety +2

      It's been done for so long we don't actually know what happens if the accordion is removed, and at this point we're afraid to try

    • @alexandruraresdatcu
      @alexandruraresdatcu Před 2 lety

      Hail the Omnissiah! He is the God in the Machine, the Source of All Knowledge.

  • @topweddingsa4059
    @topweddingsa4059 Před rokem

    Great work C.C

  • @MrGonzo347
    @MrGonzo347 Před 2 lety

    Tanks a lot for this video.

  • @tba113
    @tba113 Před 2 lety +8

    Russia: "Look, maintenance is expensive, even just preventive stuff"
    Also Russia: 7:33 "Pavel? Is squad accordion-player, obviously. Why you ask?"

  • @ashcarrier6606
    @ashcarrier6606 Před 2 lety +70

    They led with the best they had. Their "Sunday Punch".
    So every destroyed tank means two things. Partially destroyed BTGs combined to make whole BTGs, and vehicles from non-deployed units being sent to deployed units to replace lost tanks.
    And after that? T-64s? Refurbished? Maybe? T-62s?

    •  Před 2 lety +2

      They can make new. Missings part they can find in India what have west licences, Israel what is in favour with Russia, or China what have west parts.... Russia can make at full power avg 400 - 600 tanks per month ( T-72B3M, T-80BVM, T-90M) few armata..... if Russia go on war economy in arms industry, they can make avg 800 tanks per month with their capacity....

    • @ashcarrier6606
      @ashcarrier6606 Před 2 lety

      @ I am afraid you are being overly optimistic. The Armata is not yet in serial production. It is still a prototype. As is the SU-57 Felon.
      Russia needs to get out of Ukraine, arrest and hang Putin, and issue a big apology to all of eastern Europe for 70 years of authoritarian, imperial crap.

    • @WimsicleStranger
      @WimsicleStranger Před 2 lety +30

      I'm still looking for a sign of life for their revered T-14 Armata LMAO

    • @CompagnonDeMisere25
      @CompagnonDeMisere25 Před 2 lety +43

      @ Except that they cant, russia's tank production has been shut down since the war started because they are reliant on western parts to produce their tanks.

    • @kruler-westoz-nauman3638
      @kruler-westoz-nauman3638 Před 2 lety +20

      @@CompagnonDeMisere25 Yeah they sourced ball bearings from Germany as one example.

  • @jamesg2382
    @jamesg2382 Před rokem

    Awesome research. Thanks

  • @MrPatrick1212la
    @MrPatrick1212la Před 2 lety

    nice research work

  • @Warc2448
    @Warc2448 Před 2 lety +8

    7:34 What is the guy with the accordion going to do? Serenade the tank back to working order?

    • @Ariman4238
      @Ariman4238 Před 2 lety +4

      Actually it is a standard maintenance operation

    • @TacynMegan
      @TacynMegan Před 2 lety

      ever heard of the Adeptus Mechanicus?

  • @DavidB5501
    @DavidB5501 Před 2 lety +31

    I wonder what are the effects of being stored out in the open in winter in Siberia? Metal contracts and expands with changes in temperature. If liquid water gets into joints and crevices, then freezes, it expands almost irresistibly, as we know from burst water pipes. Frequent changes, with a freeze-thaw cycle, are probably more damaging than a long period of uninterrupted freeze. Just something to consider.

    • @sierraecho884
      @sierraecho884 Před 2 lety +3

      Those are probably the ones for scraps. The better ones will be in those hangers.

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 Před 2 lety +1

      Are there many freeze-thaw cycles in Siberia?
      I would imagine that for the longest time it stays below freezing.

    • @RUBIZEN
      @RUBIZEN Před 2 lety +3

      More importantly.....will Russia have enough trained accordian players to properly entertain the tanks. 7:32

    • @_tyrannus
      @_tyrannus Před 2 lety

      @@Jehty21 Siberian summers can get really hot, and winters really really cold. Continental climate at its apex.

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 Před 2 lety

      @@_tyrannus yeah, but that is not what I asked.
      What I mean is that, for example here in Germany:
      During the winter it is normal that at night it is below freezing and during the day it thaws. So you have a freeze-thaw cycle every day, even during winter.
      Whereas I would assume that in Siberia it stays below freezing for the most part of winter.

  • @TheBushrangianOrder
    @TheBushrangianOrder Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your efforts!

  • @aldosigmann419
    @aldosigmann419 Před 2 lety

    Very informative!

  • @PalleRasmussen
    @PalleRasmussen Před 2 lety +17

    A small note; the Red Army of June 1941 had 12000 tanks of all sorts at the front (and more in reserve). They ranged from outdated to T-34s and KVs. So this is not a new thing. Military historians generally say that "The USSR never scrapped anything" when describing the Red Army (and airforce) of early war. I suspect if you look at Tzarist Russia you will find the same holds true for The Great War, Crimea and the Napoleonic Wars, but I cannot say for certain.

    • @snarkanoid
      @snarkanoid Před 2 lety +3

      Reminds me of civ games, your army ends up including everything from modern armor to crossbowmen because you don't have enough money to upgrade them all.

    • @westoncain9363
      @westoncain9363 Před 2 lety +2

      They are not bad to keep around for defensive purposes. It doesn't take fuel or much maintenance to park an old tank at a crossroads or other defensive position to slowdown incoming forces. Now offensive wise that's a whole different story.

  • @jedlimon
    @jedlimon Před 2 lety +23

    I've never seen a more comprehensive synopsis of Russian tank capability. Thank you man.

  • @ronchum5178
    @ronchum5178 Před 2 lety

    A very rough but researched estimate like this is waaay better than hearsay. Nice work on this vid.

  • @valuedhumanoid6574
    @valuedhumanoid6574 Před 2 lety +8

    There's a great video that came out showing some of the captured T-72 tanks. The reactive armor was removed from the carrier and stuffed with foam. The tank was captured because the reverse gear broke and the tank could not escape so it surrendered. Some are so rusted and maintenance has not been done on it for so long that some bearings were seized up and links on tracks were fused together. The rubber pads had disintegrated so bad that the metal was in contact with the road. Just piss poor condition.

  • @Zardoz4441
    @Zardoz4441 Před 2 lety +15

    Some tanks have been sold as scrap metal, others are used for joy riding near the city of Khardiv,, a few found their way to a Russian theme park and most of them are hired to a movie company for a live action shoot about the WO 2 Kursk battle.

  • @jpacker7977
    @jpacker7977 Před 2 lety +120

    You forgot to mention the problem of systemic corruption in the Russian military. Because of this, the actual numbers of serviceable Russian tanks is actually considerably lower. Word is, that a great many stored Russian tanks have been stripped of wiring, sights, radio equipment, and critical engine parts which have doubtlessly been sold off on the black market. Maintenance and upgrade budgets have been pilfered with funds being redirected toward other illicit uses or being outright stolen. This is the state of much of Russia's stored equipment. It has been looted for going on 30 years now. The parking lot at the Russian Ministry of Defense in Moscow is full of high dollar European sports cars and SUV's. Where do you think Russian colonels and generals get that kind of money? Considering that Russians on average are worth less than 1/6 the net worth of the average American, how do they afford $75K-$150K cars? That is Putin's Russia. It is corrupt and criminal from the tippy top, all the way down to the nobody Transural conscripts who were trading their diesel to the Belarusian locals in exchange for liquor before the war. The whole system is rotten to its core.

    • @RafWalton
      @RafWalton Před 2 lety +1

      Makes sense.

    • @threethrushes
      @threethrushes Před 2 lety

      Corruption in Tsarist Russia, USSR, and in the Russian Federation is the only thing that has ever saved the West in war.
      Consider: Crimean War, Winter War, and now Ukraine War.

    • @olegbobrovskiy3244
      @olegbobrovskiy3244 Před 2 lety +11

      3,000 or so total tanks sounds reasonable then imo. Something close to 2k in the army and maaaaaybe 1,000 can be restored. Good news for my country :)

    • @djinn666
      @djinn666 Před 2 lety +3

      ""Word is, that a great many stored Russian tanks have been stripped"
      Ah yes, the extremely reliable source also known as hearsay.

    • @stingingmetal9648
      @stingingmetal9648 Před 2 lety

      "Word is". All you guys have is assumptions and insinuation.

  • @foute90s
    @foute90s Před rokem

    I really like your original research content! Thanks for spending those hours

  • @ashemgold
    @ashemgold Před 2 lety

    Great research and satellite photos. You can't hide from the eye in the sky. Thanks!

  • @mrvwbug4423
    @mrvwbug4423 Před 2 lety +61

    Even if Russia could get 3000 of those tanks into combat ready condition, they likely don't have enough crews to operate them or mechanics to maintain them or logistics to make sure they have sufficient fuel and ammo. They're already having huge problems with draft dodgers with this years April conscription (Russia does it's annual conscription every April).

    • @PhilippSeven
      @PhilippSeven Před 2 lety +2

      Russian army have 1+ mil active soldiers and 3 mil active reserve.

    • @mrvwbug4423
      @mrvwbug4423 Před 2 lety +20

      @@PhilippSeven But do they really? They were also supposed to have all their infantry in body armor that could stop a 50cal, thousands of modern T-90M tanks, and an air force that was supposed to crush any trace of Ukranian air power or defense in days. And yeah, we see how THAT turned out haha. A lot of paper army that really went into general's pockets

    • @PhilippSeven
      @PhilippSeven Před 2 lety +3

      @@mrvwbug4423 >>They were also supposed to have all their infantry in body armor that could stop a 50cal,
      Not all. Only front-line units and special forces. And they have it.
      >>thousands of modern T-90M tanks
      Why? T-72B3 is enough. T-14 or T-90M it's overkill, almost all armored forces of Ukraine have been destroyed already.
      >>an air force that was supposed to crush any trace of Ukranian air power or defense in days
      And it's already done. Only manpads is still active.
      >> A lot of paper army that really went into general's pockets
      In Ukraine right now Russia use very limited forces. And that's why they call it "operation", not a "war". They assault Ukrainian position with fewer troops than the defenders, and do it well. They not use 'carpet bombing' tactic over cities as US did in Iraq.

    • @vladraduandrei5227
      @vladraduandrei5227 Před 2 lety +6

      @@PhilippSeven oh another bot coping hard here and using this expired since birth argument

    • @vladraduandrei5227
      @vladraduandrei5227 Před 2 lety +5

      @Space Lizard you bots are going strong, no one cares about you but you earn your rubles

  • @oh8wingman
    @oh8wingman Před 2 lety +273

    A number of years ago I met a young fellow from Finland, At the time, Finland had a mandatory military draft of two years for young men. When he was in basic training about 300 in his group herded into a large classroom for training in regards to the enemies Finland was facing. One of the instructors was at the podium and he informed the class that Russia had about 2000 tanks sitting at the border pointed straight at Finland. There was a collective gasp in the room and all the draftees sat thinking about the fact that they only had about 300 tanks in their forces. The instructor them smiled and told the, "It's not as bad as it looks boys. You see, we calculate that only about 500 or so will make it very far into our country. Why? Because Russian tanks are so poorly made that only about 500 will make it inside the border while the other 1500 won't even start or they will break down along the way and become a parts source for those remaining."

    • @tumppu1975
      @tumppu1975 Před 2 lety +29

      Mandatory military service in finland has been max 1 year since 1922, so I highly doubt that "young fellow" was a) finnish or b) actually ever been in the military here. Longest possible service would be civilian service instead of military and the longest it could take was 16 months for a few years during the late 80s and early 90s.

    • @oh8wingman
      @oh8wingman Před 2 lety +25

      @@tumppu1975 I stand corrected. It was a long time ago back in the late 60's and my memory could be fading in time. In any event, he wasn't in the service for very long. He managed to mangle his foot and was mustered out.

    • @tumppu1975
      @tumppu1975 Před 2 lety +13

      @@oh8wingman Well, considering it's been 50 years, misremembering is entirely understandable.

    • @epicgamer3614
      @epicgamer3614 Před 2 lety +13

      I am pretty sure finland used russians tanks during the cold war.
      The finnish military doesnt think they are poorly made although they are poorly maintained

    • @epicgamer3614
      @epicgamer3614 Před 2 lety +21

      *poorly maintained if they were poorly made finland wouldnt have used t72s well into the 2000s

  • @RO8s
    @RO8s Před rokem

    Good work!

  • @c3p0boba56
    @c3p0boba56 Před rokem

    Such a research done, impressive. Did you also find the nuclear arsenal and where they are pointing at? Would be great to know so I can avoid those future hot spots.

  • @dandylion1987
    @dandylion1987 Před 2 lety +55

    The Ukraine war is nothing compared to the war in Cabal's comment section

  • @Alex-zl3ke
    @Alex-zl3ke Před 2 lety +42

    Also, Russia recently started gifting some of its tanks to Ukraine. What a nice neighbor.

    • @mifolyikittgyongyoson8052
      @mifolyikittgyongyoson8052 Před 2 lety +2

      Good thing that Ukraine has reciprocate this noble gesture!

    • @stolek6908
      @stolek6908 Před 2 lety +3

      Also viceverse , lots of west atgm was given to DNR army. And zelensky constantly crain for tanks like a bitch. What do you think why is that?

    • @macc5963
      @macc5963 Před 2 lety +9

      @@stolek6908 Losing an ATGM isn't as costly as a lost tank lol

    • @jeckjeck3119
      @jeckjeck3119 Před 2 lety +13

      @@macc5963
      Or the flagship moskva, it almost costs as much as ONE Putin's Yacht!

    • @frederickdouglass7140
      @frederickdouglass7140 Před 2 lety +2

      🤣🤣🤣🙈🙈🇺🇦🙏

  • @TraderRobin
    @TraderRobin Před rokem

    Impressive! You must really be passionate about this stuff to spend all that time, doing research to find all those tank storage sites!

  • @kummer45
    @kummer45 Před rokem

    NOW THIS IS A STRICT MILITARY CHANNEL. Precise, accurate, real to the found information leaving speculation aside. Sir THIS IS QUALITY.
    I haven't seen high standards like these in DECADES.

  • @hinder10709
    @hinder10709 Před 2 lety +21

    From now on, in response to Russian Accordion mechanics I want a dude just shredding on a Flying V whenever an Abrams gets serviced.

    • @scratchy996
      @scratchy996 Před 2 lety +3

      There should be a law for this.

    • @tbeller80
      @tbeller80 Před 2 lety

      I'm just going to put this here czcams.com/video/qwoWo4ChYuQ/video.html&ab_channel=DoctorWho

  • @muthias4582
    @muthias4582 Před 2 lety +34

    Another video to help us question Russia’s “honesty” from the past. I always had a little eyebrow raised at the amount of tanks Russia allegedly had because I knew something wasn’t right but good to have a video like this to remind me why.

    • @ratfink2413
      @ratfink2413 Před rokem

      the good tanks are hidden from satellites ;)

    • @Anonerak2
      @Anonerak2 Před rokem

      @@ratfink2413 Yeah the laser ones have an invisibility cloak permanently on.

  • @lafeeshmeister
    @lafeeshmeister Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your service.

  • @brokeandtired
    @brokeandtired Před 2 lety +3

    Even the OK looking ones are almost certainly rusted out inside with long seized transmissions. You don't store tanks in the open. I doubt if even 10% could be easily brought back into service.

  • @wacojones8062
    @wacojones8062 Před 2 lety +4

    I drew vehicles for reserve training from National Guard units that had full time Care Bears working year-round to keep them ready. We would do full tech inspections including all Basic Issue Items drawn from the warehouse in the motor pool anything not ready was fixed within a day, so our training be it 2 days on a weekend or a 2 week annual training went relativity smoothly broken fan belts a few times and one ruptured radiator were the worst we had to deal with. We expected to change track pads every rotation sections of ten for the most part but that was in the scheduled maintenance well before we showed up. I still miss the hustle and fun of drawing and turning in the tracks M113 family we used.

  • @user-dv7hq2rh4g
    @user-dv7hq2rh4g Před 2 lety +27

    Russia bots/brainwashed fanboys complaining in 3, 2, 1...
    (Btw., how do you like your new Slava class submarine? 😁 )

    • @Ariman4238
      @Ariman4238 Před 2 lety +1

      kinda sharp joke

    • @test-qz4dq
      @test-qz4dq Před 2 lety +7

      Putin: everything is going by Plan.

    • @Ariman4238
      @Ariman4238 Před 2 lety

      @@test-qz4dq We have a phrase in russian "to make a good face with a bad game"

  • @robertdesrosiers2382
    @robertdesrosiers2382 Před 2 lety

    Excellent work.

  • @TheCrimsonLupus
    @TheCrimsonLupus Před 2 lety +77

    For years Russian tankers feared TOW missiles, now they fear being towed by tractors...
    PS: Thanks for the video - good analysis!

  • @AZTrigger
    @AZTrigger Před 2 lety +80

    Good video. A couple of adds here:
    1.) Their combat effective inventory is likely only around 2K. The fact they have already lost 700+ tells you have quickly they are degrading their military force
    2.) As we are seeing in Ukraine, most of their crews are being destroyed with their tanks. The Japanese learned this lesson the hard way in WWII: it is much easier to replace equipment (planes) then the people (pilots) who can effectively operate them. My guess is their losses in skilled operators is much worse than their material losses.
    3.) Tanks are only as effective as their supply lines - Germany learned this the hard way in WWII as well. Russia is notoriously bad at supply logistics and with mud season starting in the Ukraine, the only place more dangerous then being in a Russia tank could be being in their supply lines that are exposed and stuck to the roads.

    • @galimbertino4939
      @galimbertino4939 Před 2 lety +2

      Et la marmotte elle emballe le chocolat dans de l'aluminium...

    • @rtqii
      @rtqii Před 2 lety +7

      @@galimbertino4939 I love the Azov Battalion... There are 30 million Special Forces in that battalion, and they have magic war powers. They are invincible, and they never miss. When they were surrounded in Mariupol they respawned in Bucha, committed war crimes, and then blamed the Russians!!! They attacked and drove the Russians out of Kyiv causing enormous losses. They have infiltrated the highest levels of the Russian military. They have combat units hidden under the beds of Russian civilians, and they come out, at night, and commit war crimes behind the Russian lines. Nothing the Russians can do will ever stop them. How do you stop 30 million Special Forces that have magic war powers?

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 2 lety

      what happens after mud season? in WW2 many battles were timely, then slow intensity period, then big attack again... if it will be stalemate, summer can be another attack. But ukraine can be exhausted by May too.

    • @mweskamppp
      @mweskamppp Před 2 lety +1

      The logistics of the wehrmacht was superb - the best army in the 20th century. Germany had not the resources, mainly no oil. Thats why they tried to reach the oil fields in egypt or the oil fields in azerbaidschan.

    • @maxkronader5225
      @maxkronader5225 Před 2 lety +15

      @@effexon
      The difference is that a lot of foreign aid is pouring into Ukraine while sanctions continue to tighten on Russia. Time is on Ukraine's side.
      Frankly, ever since the Kiev offensive failed, this war has been about how Russia can do something that could reasonably be interpreted as anything other than a humiliating defeat. The recent loss of the Slava class cruiser Moskva has made matters even worse for Russia. This is shaping up to be the biggest national humiliation since Afghanistan.

  • @janwitts2688
    @janwitts2688 Před 2 lety +8

    Correction .. Russia was not victorious over Germany in WW2 .. the USSR was...

  • @schubiduba1
    @schubiduba1 Před rokem

    7:22 The most important part of repairing a tank is to play the accordion