Unstoppable: Russia's Secret to Producing 12,000 Shells a Day

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2024
  • The production of artillery shells is a complex and precise process involving multiple stages. It begins with the sourcing and refining of raw materials like steel and explosives, followed by meticulous assembly and rigorous quality control to ensure reliability and safety, given the destructive power these shells wield.
    Against this backdrop of intricate shell production, Russia's current output is nothing short of extraordinary. Producing 12,320 artillery shells daily, Russia's scale of operations dwarfs typical military manufacturing outputs. At $1,000 per shell, the daily production cost reaches over $12 million, underscoring the significant economic investment Russia is making to maintain its artillery capabilities.
    But how did Russia manage to achieve this remarkable production rate? And what are the broader implications for the current conflict in Ukraine?
    Attributions:
    1. By Mike1979 Russia - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    2. By Mike1979 Russia - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    3. By Kremlin.ru, CC BY 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 616

  • @AkyJLa_
    @AkyJLa_ Před 16 dny +277

    Dude, those industrial shovels are crazy

    • @Jack_Sparrow655
      @Jack_Sparrow655 Před 16 dny +11

      😂 yo this comment made my day 🫡🇷🇺

    • @yurinalysis8034
      @yurinalysis8034 Před 16 dny +15

      12,000 shovels produce a day in no joke 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Galvatorrix
      @Galvatorrix Před 16 dny +9

      It's amazing what a shovel can do. 8 Abrams tanks, 1 of them towed all the way to Moscow to be viewed by the public on Victory Day. Never underestimate Russian ingenuity!

    • @BoleDaPole
      @BoleDaPole Před 16 dny +3

      Technically they can be called shovels because they dig holes.
      Also artillery is old tech so it's basically a ww1 shovel.

    • @philliprobertlawman2232
      @philliprobertlawman2232 Před 16 dny +3

      Did you see all the washing machines in the corner??

  • @user-wr1fw6ib6y
    @user-wr1fw6ib6y Před 16 dny +156

    Then I'm sure China makes 120.000 in backyard of small workshop

    • @nellyeco
      @nellyeco Před 16 dny +2

      And they get stuck in the turret haha

    • @Retrocidal
      @Retrocidal Před 16 dny +7

      @@nellyeco lol your agreeing with a BOT bro sad

    • @Ali-hu8jr
      @Ali-hu8jr Před 16 dny +8

      Not true. In Soviet time, they could mass produce weapons easily. Because that are Russian state factories, not belong to any individual company. So, Russia can push any cost.

    • @besticudcumupwith202
      @besticudcumupwith202 Před 16 dny +2

      ​@@Retrocidal...how do you know that's a bot? The "user..." profile name?
      See a lot of those in comments but they don't always sound like bots.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 16 dny

      North Korean

  • @seanc3549
    @seanc3549 Před 16 dny +84

    It has long been Russian military doctrine: 'Quantity has a quality all its own.'

    • @jtkrpm1
      @jtkrpm1 Před 16 dny +8

      That used to be the USA in WW2. our equipment was sub par to the Germans. But, we had a massive industrial base. Which we do not have anymore. China and Russia can out manufacturer all of NATO.

    • @RomanianReaver
      @RomanianReaver Před 16 dny +3

      @@jtkrpm1
      Lets not eat ass here. US WW2 equipment was some of the best. Frontal armor on M4 Shermans was functionally equivalent to tiger 1s by late war so their protection was good and the 76mm was a great gun that came too late to see much use. Where the US sucked arse was in its leadership, particularly logistics company level, that saw D-Day and after battles fought by M4s with long 75s when the long 76 armed shermans were available already in number.

    • @hanshuber1875
      @hanshuber1875 Před 15 dny +1

      Yeah, name a single moment, when this worked for russia?

    • @RomanianReaver
      @RomanianReaver Před 15 dny +2

      @@hanshuber1875
      World War 2
      Napoleonic War
      Nordic War
      want me to go on?

    • @hanshuber1875
      @hanshuber1875 Před 15 dny

      @@RomanianReaver obviously it didnt work in the WW2. The USSR would have lost without the support of the USA. During the Napoleonic war, it was obvious that russia couldnt win a fight, so they retreated and let napoleon be defeated by the winter. And during the Nordic war, im not sure we are talking about the same (1700-1721), was something else. It was basicly an alliance and not russia alone. So go on, those examples proof nothing.

  • @user-ew2xh5ij1y
    @user-ew2xh5ij1y Před 16 dny +129

    An ordinary 152 mm Russian shot costs 500 dollars (not 1000 dollars, as the author of the video says), an ordinary 155 mm shot of the NATO sample costs 5000-6.000 dollars. "Excalibur" costs $ 25,000 (not $ 4,000, as the author of the video says), the latest model "Krasnopol-M" costs $ 8,000. The author is just not in the subject at all.

    • @aralaX_K
      @aralaX_K Před 15 dny +5

      The author of the video has a very lively fantasy, same as @jameschalkwig787

    • @leoslemixv
      @leoslemixv Před 15 dny +4

      @@aralaX_K Author compleete far awsay from reality, make mess with price, mess in the head, probably he/she/it,..../..../..... (i dont know how to call correctly in the DERMOcratos world) still think than UE/Us win WW2 %))) Not USSR (they just walk arround)

    • @ilijaspasojevic7031
      @ilijaspasojevic7031 Před 15 dny +2

      According to the voice, I would say that it is a former American soldier, who normally has his own personal channel (I don't know if these recordings are clips from that channel, or if he lends his voice here or if this is his other channel, I got a little confused here, I admit ?). I only know that on his personal channel, where he always appears in person, not only in voice, that he is very anti-Russian, even Russophobic. He minimizes every Russian success as much as possible, and exaggerates every one, even some trivial Ukrainian (more precisely, NATO side) success.

    • @dannye6912
      @dannye6912 Před 15 dny +4

      *In particular, operating and support costs for the M982 Excalibur - a GPS-guided 155-mm artillery shell supplied to Ukraine - nearly doubled between 2011 and 2022 to roughly $100,000 per shell, according to a Government Accountability Office report. (16 mars 2024, Business insider)

    • @henryrollins9177
      @henryrollins9177 Před 15 dny +1

      ​@@ilijaspasojevic7031This is a machine speaking, not the channel's owner voice.

  • @kampfer91
    @kampfer91 Před 16 dny +151

    But the UK intel said Russian ran out of shell since 2 years ago .

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny +27

      Also RU are losing 500k men a month.

    • @yurinalysis8034
      @yurinalysis8034 Před 16 dny +29

      @@Shyhalu lmao the war is on going for 28 months. So if the Russians lost 500k men a month it means 500k x 28 = 14,000,000 casualties 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @ercanylmaz967
      @ercanylmaz967 Před 16 dny +2

      putin said they will get kyiv in 3 days😂

    • @pitdusk8
      @pitdusk8 Před 16 dny +3

      Just compare the results in the battlefield, you will know who is really saying the truth.

    • @SamiBayasi
      @SamiBayasi Před 16 dny

      Kiev well fell ​@@ercanylmaz967

  • @craig4867
    @craig4867 Před 16 dny +113

    From Russia with Love ❤

  • @joebol2036
    @joebol2036 Před 16 dny +91

    These are the bare minimum figures. Russian military industrial complex is state owned, hence, can rapidly increase/decrease production in multiples.

    • @toddsterling4949
      @toddsterling4949 Před 16 dny

      You seem to forget when USSR broke up they lost half of there manufacturing capabilities, If you believe these fake stories, You really need help!!

    • @flemishpopulist1477
      @flemishpopulist1477 Před 16 dny

      What is your source that this is the 'bare minimum figures,' or did you pull that out of Putin's sphincter hole?

    • @korefighter
      @korefighter Před 15 dny +3

      its the different between profit driven production and purpose driven production. There is an extensive documentary on why purpose "state" driven production is far superior to the profit driven model the US/West has when it comes to scaling production up or down.

    • @flemishpopulist1477
      @flemishpopulist1477 Před 15 dny +1

      @@korefighter When it comes to military mass production, you are 100% correct. Now the downside to state-owned, purpose-driven production is that you have far less possibility of innovation, both in product and process. So, there is a real possibility that even the production process becomes less efficient due to the lack of incentive for the state to implement innovative production practices, unlike private. Private production desires efficiency, as efficiency equals higher profit margins. This is what happened in the Soviet Union. If you only care about volume, then it can be superior, at least in the near-term.

    • @cauchyschwarz3295
      @cauchyschwarz3295 Před 15 dny

      @@flemishpopulist1477 That is simply untrue. Because it was that way in the Soviet Union does not mean it has to be like that simply because the production is purpose driven. It's a false dichotomy that neoliberals make to claim their approach is without proper alternative

  • @drnick40
    @drnick40 Před 16 dny +30

    A $4000 for an “Excalibur”? Give me a break. How about $40000. This is a very expensive weapon.

  • @user-oc3im9fe9q
    @user-oc3im9fe9q Před 16 dny +31

    An important detail that helps Russia to increase the production of ammunition. Military enterprises have a significant share of state participation. This allows individuals to earn money from the war, and the state does not overpay for the products of the defense industry. Because the state can regulate purchase prices. And not like in the USA, where the Pentagon pays $10,000 for a part with a market value of $500. The American media found out. If it is so expensive to sell, the military budget will not be enough.

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny +2

      Pfft, we pay $8 to $15,000 for lightswitches.

    • @CepheusTalks
      @CepheusTalks Před 16 dny

      @@Shyhalu $52,000 for an office room trash can

    • @user-oc3im9fe9q
      @user-oc3im9fe9q Před 15 dny

      @@CepheusTalks The ancient Roman orator Cicero said that three things are needed in war: money, money and once again - money. And this is the absolute truth. But he did not say that they should be squandered. Just the opposite.

  • @aralaX_K
    @aralaX_K Před 16 dny +47

    Calculated on 30 days per month, 250K/month is 8 300 shells/day And 12 320 shells/day is 370K/month Mr Defense TV.

    • @6b32wuifan5
      @6b32wuifan5 Před 16 dny +5

      Math is crucial…

    • @aralaX_K
      @aralaX_K Před 15 dny

      @@jameschalkwig787 Well, then I guess we have to take it for granted, that you are a worker, or a foreman, or maybe a caretaker, at a Russian artillery ammunition factory since you seem to be so conversant about the production volumes and their operating hours. Btw, 1M/d makes it 365M/y. Not even all the countries of the world combined 24/7 could produce such volumes. That kind of quantity exists only in your lively fantasy. Your mathematical calculations have such a sharp precision that I assume you must be Keith Devlin.

    • @jordanrowe9229
      @jordanrowe9229 Před 15 dny

      ​@@aralaX_Kno you are wrong when it's war the economy goes into war mode fracturing mass amounts of weapons... mankind does not stop here my dear..

  • @user-xg5ho8hb9o
    @user-xg5ho8hb9o Před 16 dny +19

    Привет всем товарищи. Вот это производство которое и строили коммунисты по этому так быстро нарастает производство.

  • @Ym-oi2we
    @Ym-oi2we Před 16 dny +16

    What's truly amazing is that they produce more shells, manufacture more equipment, produce more materials, and yet their annual defense budget is close to 200 billion/year. In the US, our defense budget is close to 1 trillion/year and we can't even come close to keeping up with their ammo production, eqp and mat production, and yet we spend way more than they do. I don't understand how that's possible considering the resources that we have "granted" the pentagon. Hopefully. we can figure out what the heck is going on and fix it ASAP. Also, they don't outsource their shell production which allow for a continuous stream from supply chain to the soldier all under the same umbrella. They produce their own shells and they know exactly how their soldier's use the shells as well as what their tendencies are so everything is uniquely designed for maximum throughput.

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny

      Its called grift, corruption, and Republicans. Although this time around they decided to share the war mongering with Democrats.

    • @user-ew2xh5ij1y
      @user-ew2xh5ij1y Před 16 dny

      As soon as the US military budget ceases to be a big feeder for corrupt officials from the military-industrial complex and lobbyists from Congress, everything will get better right away. And besides, you need to stop maintaining more than 800 military bases around the world, supplying weapons to the Nazis in Europe and fomenting conflicts around the world, then the shells to protect your country will remain. In the USA, it is not a task to produce a lot of ammunition, in the USA it is a task to earn a lot of money for the Rothschilds and Rockefellers. And Russia's military budget is slightly more than $130 billion, but not 200 billion.

    • @lordbendtner7021
      @lordbendtner7021 Před 16 dny +1

      Huge budget with horrible bookkeeping.

    • @SovietBelka
      @SovietBelka Před 16 dny +7

      Bruh, Pentagon buys a small bag of bushings for $90,000. Everything is grossly overpriced.

    • @corrion1
      @corrion1 Před 15 dny +2

      I think one bag of screws on the f35 was quoted at $8000 lol

  • @Shyhalu
    @Shyhalu Před 16 dny +16

    It cost us more than $4,000 per shell, the transportation costs to get them there are massive.

    • @yurinalysis8034
      @yurinalysis8034 Před 16 dny

      As far as I know, the Russians relied on train wagons to transport those shells behind the front lines and then trucks delivers them to the main front lines.

    • @lordbendtner7021
      @lordbendtner7021 Před 16 dny

      He meant US.

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny +2

      @@yurinalysis8034 Correct, and compare that to the US having airplanes and ships have to move the materials - the massive security detail needed, etc etc.
      RU can run trains cheap, we can't do that for planes and ships unless the ships are nuclear powered.
      Even then, we cross an entire ocean and a giant landmass before it even enters Ukraine.
      Its a lot more than $4k per shell.

  • @tabasco-jf7eb
    @tabasco-jf7eb Před 16 dny +74

    America can do that too in Hollywood 😂😂😂

  • @stevenjohns7017
    @stevenjohns7017 Před 16 dny +118

    This is how they won WW2.

    • @moonshine7374
      @moonshine7374 Před 16 dny +7

      But amerika won ww2

    • @alexeilebedev7462
      @alexeilebedev7462 Před 16 dny +28

      ​@@moonshine7374 учи историю... Потом пиши...

    • @stevenjohns7017
      @stevenjohns7017 Před 16 dny +14

      @@moonshine7374 lols

    • @oaiaferoce
      @oaiaferoce Před 16 dny

      US used Russians to win ww2. Why kill its own men, when poor Russian peasants were in abundance? Sadly for the poor Russians, ww3 will be the same.

    • @mmohanoha
      @mmohanoha Před 16 dny +13

      @@moonshine7374r you joking?

  • @pexonifikacija
    @pexonifikacija Před 16 dny +19

    what dollar ? the dollar has an ugly past.

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny +3

      It has an even uglier future too unfortunately.

    • @michalzajic8602
      @michalzajic8602 Před 16 dny

      @@Shyhalu if you like to loose most of your savings please exchange to toilet paper called russian ruble🤣😂😂👍👍👍

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny

      @@michalzajic8602 Being worth toilet paper is better than being worth nothing at all with a government that prints $1 trillion+ every year.
      The only thing backing the dollar is a banking system.
      BIRCS is pushing to back things by commodities like gold and oil.
      You're standing at the precipice and laughing like a fool, but the only way we have to go is down hill.

  • @mynameismynameis666
    @mynameismynameis666 Před 16 dny +6

    Pentagon couldn't withstand 5 audits the Pentagon did on itself.... making the goat into the gardener....

  • @robssonxr
    @robssonxr Před 16 dny +64

    Not 1000$.....max 200$😊

    • @321A21
      @321A21 Před 16 dny

      It is not some kind of recipe

    • @xzenislevx
      @xzenislevx Před 16 dny +10

      Не говори им

    • @dinrash7613
      @dinrash7613 Před 16 dny +1

      I also think that $1000 per shell is expensive for Russia or somebody in Ministry of Defense making good money out of it. As NATO shell cost $800

    • @kanestalin7246
      @kanestalin7246 Před 16 dny +3

      Probably 1000 dollars for a guided shell like krasnopol or 1000 rubles instead

    • @dinrash7613
      @dinrash7613 Před 16 dny

      @@kanestalin7246 1000 rubles is $10. It is more like Soviet times prices when all resources were free. Maybe Russia has some reserves since then that is why production is not in upper scale. Another possible source for cheap shells is North Korea

  • @shumyinghon
    @shumyinghon Před 16 dny +5

    hasn't anyone read of soviet russian capacity to make weapons in ww2?

  • @75050Umair
    @75050Umair Před 16 dny +16

    Brave Russian, long live Russia

  • @jtkrpm1
    @jtkrpm1 Před 16 dny +13

    they don't have to worry about carbon emissions and other handicaps of western nations, probably.

    • @Mr.Rakija
      @Mr.Rakija Před 16 dny +1

      yup hahaha

    • @jtkrpm1
      @jtkrpm1 Před 16 dny

      @@Mr.Rakija it has to be intentional sabotage. Once the "green" energy agenda is fully implemented by all Western nations, we will be completely helpless. How would we manufacturer anything with only wind turbines and solar panels?

    • @herohero-fw1vc
      @herohero-fw1vc Před 9 dny

      The military is exempt from carbon treaties for all countries. The US air force and navy are the biggest polluters of the planet.

  • @craig4867
    @craig4867 Před 16 dny +7

    COMBAT APPROVED
    On CZcams!

  • @pradz14
    @pradz14 Před 16 dny +8

    Why did NATO & EU didnt think about it?

  • @marcbjorg4823
    @marcbjorg4823 Před 16 dny +8

    Shells don't have to be made entirely of steel. It is just the old way to make them. Only the part of the shell that follows the gun rifling needs to be metal. Other parts can be metallic composite ceramics that are much easier to produce.

    • @joket4445
      @joket4445 Před 16 dny +2

      The projectile MUST BE steel - steel is not just a housing for explosives - it is essentially an impact material for creating damaging fragments.

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Před 16 dny +2

      So much easier in fact, it takes twice as long. First you have to manufacture both parts in different plants, then you have the complicated assembly. Probably in another factory? So you can add some transport costs and time ON TOP of twice the effort both parts take. Make it complicated! stupid?

    • @tonybailey132
      @tonybailey132 Před 16 dny

      They dont have rifling, not their tanks anyway .The shells on the news in US factory looked the same .

  • @isuruudara2907
    @isuruudara2907 Před 16 dny +72

    Russia is Unstoppable 😊❤

    • @goatman3828
      @goatman3828 Před 16 dny +3

      That would explain theor 3 day SMO. They were just unstoppable. So fierce they retreated and lost the majority of the land. Just unstoppable!🤔🤣😂🧐

    • @6b32wuifan5
      @6b32wuifan5 Před 16 dny

      @@goatman3828majority?
      I started gambling with 0 earned 100 and lost 25, still won by 75

    • @Art-si7cj
      @Art-si7cj Před 16 dny +5

      @@goatman3828 3 day SMO in sleepy joes dreams. Last time I checked Ukraine lost 20% of their land. Nice copium tho

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny

      @@goatman3828 They sieged Kiev and got a neutrality agreement that Z later broke after they left, stop watching western legacy media.

    • @tw6711
      @tw6711 Před 16 dny +1

      why are they fleeing crimea?

  • @henripihala6230
    @henripihala6230 Před 16 dny +6

    Workers: hey guys, the boss man is coming! Act like you are busy!

    • @pradz14
      @pradz14 Před 16 dny +1

      This is what happened in the enemies country 😂

    • @jerromedrakejr9332
      @jerromedrakejr9332 Před 16 dny +4

      Like EVERYWHERE on this planet... and the solar system... and the galaxy...

  • @avanildoalexandredesouza8530

    Show 🇷🇺 👏 🇷🇺 👏...chora otan!

  • @brianmurray1395
    @brianmurray1395 Před 15 dny +1

    This is why they are the most powerful landforms in the world!!

  • @boerplaas388
    @boerplaas388 Před 15 dny +4

    Russia 🇷🇺 is so far ahead of many countries in manufacturing. They are now the 5th largest economy in record time. From the 90,s till today it is a extraordinary accomplishment. And in years to come they’ll be even better. They’re unstoppable and the west is jealous.

    • @napobg6842
      @napobg6842 Před 7 dny

      They are the 11th largest economy in the world. They dropped few positions since 2022. Their manufacturing sector employs a lot of people but it is very outdated. The industrial automation in Russia is really in very early stages. Their manufacturing output is about the same size as the UK and France. But the difference is that Russia has more people working in manufacturing than the UK and France combined and they even have more than Germany. These 3 countries have very high level of automation relative to Russia and they continue to rise.

  • @krishisha6918
    @krishisha6918 Před 16 dny +13

    Why don't you mention the barrel replacement capacity of artillery guns? The most important. West has lost the industrial capacity the east has not. Outsourcing doesn't work in wars.

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Před 16 dny

      It only works, if the factories are under direct attack. Otherwise it's just more effort and transport.

    • @ReamerBlitzer
      @ReamerBlitzer Před 16 dny

      The barrels of western artillery guns are made up of titanium for light and fast transport and the problem with it is the maintenance due to light materials more wear and tear while the russian artilleries are made up of steel and they are super heavy so less maintenance. Western artillery guns are made for fast deployment like invading a country and such while russian artillery are made for defending its country

    • @Bullshit1011
      @Bullshit1011 Před 16 dny

      Do you know how many rounds before a barrel change is required?

  • @theGeniustechDHRUVGOEL
    @theGeniustechDHRUVGOEL Před 15 dny +1

    When wars are stretched for so long then Quantity becomes the key Quality.

  • @AlexJane-ok2zw
    @AlexJane-ok2zw Před 8 dny +1

    Naturally...Super power nation shows!

  • @edwardspan396
    @edwardspan396 Před 12 dny +1

    The trick is not having someone get rich from every screw and washer.

  • @BanzLanda86
    @BanzLanda86 Před 15 dny +1

    Shells in western factories cost between $4k to $8k per shell.

  • @warrenash5370
    @warrenash5370 Před 4 dny

    Love those industrial strength washing machines, too!

  • @rickyshingnaisui6374
    @rickyshingnaisui6374 Před 10 dny +1

    Now that's a lot of damage

  • @user-iv8pd2jt3d
    @user-iv8pd2jt3d Před 16 dny +10

    No corruption in the system allows for greater production something the America knows nothing about

    • @brentdallyn8459
      @brentdallyn8459 Před 16 dny

      No corruption? spare us all your BS troll boy! we know the truth and so do you.

    • @digital2105
      @digital2105 Před 15 dny +1

      Explain to me again how your generals can afford to buy luxury yachts.

    • @rodiculous9464
      @rodiculous9464 Před 14 dny

      There is corruption the difference is that in russia corruption is seen as corruption whereas in America corruption is institutionalized and legalized bc the corporations own the governing bodies that govern themselves ergo you end up paying $90,000 for a bag of bushings and the average American is so stupid from 12 years of learning pronouns and micro aggressions that you just tell them "oh these are super duper exceptional American bushings" and they go "durrrrr ok" and drool on themselves and go back to watching football..

    • @napobg6842
      @napobg6842 Před 7 dny

      Another rage bait comment

    • @napobg6842
      @napobg6842 Před 7 dny

      @@digital2105 Nah bro, this guy said there is no corruption.

  • @user-ul4wy2lx2m
    @user-ul4wy2lx2m Před 12 dny +1

    The standard are different in the west because those shells can go up in storage lol 😂 but it’s still impressive to make that amount of shells .

  • @Furzkampfbomber
    @Furzkampfbomber Před 15 dny +2

    Meanwhile in Germany: The navy of the Bundeswehr puts a new class of frigates into commission, sends one of them into a warzone and realises _then,_ they not only have just a limited stockpile of ammunitions for this ship, but Germany is actually incapable of producing more of it...

    • @cyberwave3745
      @cyberwave3745 Před 13 dny +1

      Ha Ha!! I remember that, they ran screaming all the way back to Germany

    • @napobg6842
      @napobg6842 Před 7 dny

      Germany is incapable of producing more of it? You know that Germany is one of the most industrial countries in the world and they can produce more ammo probably than the rest of the continent combined?

    • @Furzkampfbomber
      @Furzkampfbomber Před 7 dny

      @@napobg6842 I live in Germany and Merkel and the 'Ampel' (traffic light), our Red-Green-Yellow (FDP, once a libertarian party, they have utterly lost their way) have laid waste to the Germany you used to know. It does not exist anymore.
      The Green Party have completely wrecked our economy, our inner security and our future.
      We have the highes taxes and dues in the world, while our wages and pensions are plummeting.
      We have the highest energy prices in the world, due to the Green's 'energy transformation', which by the way also means we have no energy security.
      There were powerlines planned between Germany as Sweden, as well as the Netherlands, and both have now refused that project, because for them the question is not _if_ Germany will experience huge, area-covering black outs.
      We have a completely escalated bureaucracy which is also strangling the economy.
      During the course of last year, almost 180.000 companies went bankrupt or gave up, which means one dying company every. three. minutes.
      The rest is about to go bankrupt, to give up or leave the country. This year, for instance, BASF will invest 10 billion Euro for new factories in China - while at the same time declaring to retreat almost completely from the very nation it was founded in . Because they make profit everywhere, only in Germany, they make massiv losses.
      And apart from that, Merkel and the Ampel have flooded and still flood Germany with migrants. And we're not talking about the thankful, diligent kind, oh no no. We are talking islamism, hatred for western culture and germans, knife murders every. bloody. day., gang r*apes on a regular base.
      And when you call a migrant gang r*pist a 'r*pist pig' as a german, you will go to jail for longer than the gang r*pists themselfes. No joke, that just happened.
      This government fights a war against its own nation and its own people and it is about to win.
      No offense, I am just totally embiddered, but apparently you have no. bloody. clue what is going on here in Germany.

  • @sivaprasad.k.sivaprasad.k.3769

    💪🙏 FROM INDIA.💖

  • @napobg6842
    @napobg6842 Před 7 dny

    The title would let people believe that this was something impressive

  • @kcvriess
    @kcvriess Před 16 dny +1

    The reason why Russian shells and most other armements are much cheaper than those produced in the Wesr is not just because Russian labor is cheaper. It's mostly because most Russian arms manufacturers are partially or entirely state owned. So they they hardly care about profit margins like Western (often publicly traded) arms manufacturers do. For countries like Russia, war is just that...war. For Western countries, war means business.

  • @garydurandt4260
    @garydurandt4260 Před 15 dny +1

    Strangest looking shovels I have ever seen. I feel sorry for all the housewives who cannot use their washing machines as the chips have been removed by the military.

  • @remigiopalamini8378
    @remigiopalamini8378 Před 15 dny +1

    Viva la grande popolazione Russa un popolo dei migliori con grande capacità e umiltà vera I più grandi

  • @andrewsansom4798
    @andrewsansom4798 Před 16 dny +4

    I would love to know where this production cost comes from? you are in lala land if you think that's what Russia pays...

    • @Triggernlfrl
      @Triggernlfrl Před 16 dny

      When you do not know the production cost it may be you that is wandering in lala land...

  • @consciousplanet8887
    @consciousplanet8887 Před 16 dny

    You hv access to the russian military acct books or you are just guessing about the cost of each shell

  • @PASKEN458
    @PASKEN458 Před dnem

    Meanwhile EU is researching how to make an environmentally friendly green shell

  • @user-be2vn6en6x
    @user-be2vn6en6x Před 15 dny +1

    Those shovel are making devil US so angry, wonder why!

  • @Finger-E-Mayas
    @Finger-E-Mayas Před 16 dny

    Uff! Fresh off the assembly line 😅

  • @karlstruck5297
    @karlstruck5297 Před 16 dny +3

    Hard to believe Defense TV. Can't do simple math. Nothing to see here.

  • @sayeedsayeed8720
    @sayeedsayeed8720 Před 14 dny +1

    😊❤ RUSSIA 🇷🇺 ❤

  • @lucientjinasjoe1578
    @lucientjinasjoe1578 Před 16 dny +2

    Where you have the price of1000 dollars per shell , for all I know it's between 200 to 300 dollars some time ago if i correct it was nearly 500 , but correct me if I wrong

    • @user-ew2xh5ij1y
      @user-ew2xh5ij1y Před 16 dny

      You are absolutely right. 152 mm ammunition for old artillery systems costs no more than $ 200, and for new ones - about $ 500.

  • @eyefreely9682
    @eyefreely9682 Před 14 dny

    Someone is making a LOT of Money!

  • @h3w45
    @h3w45 Před 15 dny +1

    Bravo Russia

  • @tupacpereira4015
    @tupacpereira4015 Před 16 dny +16

    Edit: ( I forgot to mention, that, there is a Recycling of these shells when they get backward-ejected and sent to Factories again) 😉
    😊These shells per day and per month are unacurate, Russia production its way more than this. Ill tell you why.
    You said 250,000 per month and 12,320 per day. All those equations are meant to be multiplied by 21 days in a normal 8 hours shift.
    And what you didnt account for was, that Russia passed a law, enforcing and allowing the workers to get 12 hour shifts with all benefits and paying bonus.
    We are talking about 3 shifts per day each shift is 8 hours work, and there also work the total of 30 or 31 days per month, and not only those 21 days.
    Which means those numbers of total shells per month are way higher than what is shown on this video
    Russia produces 381,920 shells per month/ x12 = 4,583,040 Million shells per year
    And the cost of these HE Shells 152mm for Russia is 730 $
    Annual Russia shell cost in dollars: 3, 345, 619, 200 Dollars / 297, 787, 710, 158, 4 Rubles
    Monthly : 278 801 600 Dollars / 24, 815, 642, 513, 2 Rubles
    And because Russia is a Estate Enterprise country, they can absorb all this cost's, since there is no Business guy making money of this, using the capitalist method of making money of (High demand = Higher price), like they did with 155mm NATO shells from 2,000 dollars they increase it to 8,000 dollars.
    The Russian only real cost is :
    1 - Metals which is are extracted from Russian soil, they only have to pay mining shifts. (The workers will spend their money from their shifts in food and months expenses)
    2 - Eletronics, cheaply bought from China and India and also there produce some of they're own eletronics. (China and India will pay for the eletronics for everytime they buy Russian oil daily)
    3 - Workers shift payment 😊 (The workers will spend their money from their shifts in food and months expenses)
    And 3/4 of that money goes and stays inside Russia because is a National consumption/spenduture, so is like money laundry.

    • @3epkaJLo_DyLLLu
      @3epkaJLo_DyLLLu Před 16 dny +1

      Вообще-то там по сменам работают, и получается, что снаряды делаются непрерывно полный месяц. Если не знаешь, то нечего и кукарекать.

    • @xzenislevx
      @xzenislevx Před 16 dny +5

      Не рассказывайте им

    • @goatman3828
      @goatman3828 Před 16 dny

      And you they don't have the artillary to shoot them wonky out of balance rounds.😂 when you are losing 50 artillary units every day, and your Soviet stockpiles are almost gone now. And you have to deliver the rounds 2 at a time by Chinese motorcycle, what is the point? All those crappy rounds just waiting for some motorbike to ride to the front. And the few motorcycles that actually get through means you now have 8 seconds of un-aim-able ammunition. Yea!🤣🤣

    • @toddsterling4949
      @toddsterling4949 Před 16 dny +1

      Lmao

    • @jetli740
      @jetli740 Před 16 dny +1

      @@goatman3828 keep coping

  • @makegaminggreatagain3907

    "If you are going to fight a war, you fight a war, you get it done, because there is only one option and that is to win." -Unknown

    • @thetombaxter
      @thetombaxter Před 15 dny

      If only Putin didn't have to face twenty NATO divisions, his UN wrongly condemned Special Military Operation could have conquered Ukraine in a matter of decades as was Chechnya.

  • @user-mg2uf4bq6x
    @user-mg2uf4bq6x Před 4 dny

    Россия ВПЕРЕД!!!!

  • @sangmoon2464
    @sangmoon2464 Před 14 dny

    How is their barrel production doing? They must be burning through barrels by now

  • @andrewrivera4029
    @andrewrivera4029 Před 16 dny +1

    And Ukraine wants to fight a war of attrition…

  • @MrRamSwe
    @MrRamSwe Před 15 dny

    Yes they have been unstoppable for over two years now........

    • @thetombaxter
      @thetombaxter Před 15 dny

      Yes Putin has been advancing East for years, hundreds of miles every month, except in Kherson, Buda, and Kharkin and within a decade will be in Odessa to join Chechnya as another great fast victory with the aid of mercenaries from Sri Lanka, Nepal and Russian Prisons.

  • @mahmad6802
    @mahmad6802 Před 13 dny

    Peace, Prosperity & Progress is best. But not wars.

  • @MultiYlin
    @MultiYlin Před 16 dny +2

    This number doe snot make sense to be perfectly honest.
    one 122mm artliery shells has about 15kg of steel: 15kg/shell * 12000shells = 180tons (equivalent to 0.65MT/year) but the steel production across CIS countries increase from prewar productivity of 76-80MT/year to almost 85MT/year. We know Russian increase the production at least 5-10MT/year to support the war production.
    My guess is that the number is much much higher ... Russia is sustaining low level fighting with 12,000shells fired per day but the real number I am afraid is like 2-3 times higher.

  • @user-ke4ks3cx6m
    @user-ke4ks3cx6m Před 16 dny

    Russia is not Afghanistan, America has underestimated it ...

  • @flemishpopulist1477
    @flemishpopulist1477 Před 16 dny +1

    For one, you cannot compare the cost of a standard Russian shell with a NATO Excalibur round due to one being significantly less technologically advanced (dumb or unguided) compared to a guided munition. Second, what is Russia's artillery system production numbers? You can produce all the shells in the world, but if you are losing artillery systems faster than you can replace them, then eventually you will be forced to have soldiers throw the shells at the enemy instead of shooting them with artillery.

  • @bansheep1
    @bansheep1 Před 3 dny

    That US made round Excalibur is a guided artillery round not comparable to the regular rounds you are discussing... Russian guided artillery is krasnopol..

  • @OddeyeDL76
    @OddeyeDL76 Před 16 dny

    Shifting the advantage in their favor? It could not possibly be MORE in Russia's favour.

  • @realist7239
    @realist7239 Před 16 dny +8

    Z

  • @unklebo
    @unklebo Před 15 dny

    10,000 per day?
    For the last 1000 days they have produced 10 million and advanced 30 kilometers. Obviously if they want to advance 300 km they will have to produce 100 million.
    I wish them success in projectile production.

  • @smarttec8816
    @smarttec8816 Před 12 dny

    Oh yes, that's why they have to buy shells from north korea 😂

  • @cliffslough7324
    @cliffslough7324 Před 13 dny

    The main reason that the shells are cheaper is not labour cost or materials- its because its state owned and a Not for massive profits organisation unlike the US and Nato which likes to make its owners billionaires.

  • @livefree1030
    @livefree1030 Před 16 dny +4

    California Business owner here. Here is how Russia and China can have such a successful Production on Manufacturing.
    No mandatory 5 days of Sick pay
    No PTO
    No Mental Health days
    No Unions
    No Strict OT and Meal Break Laws
    No OSHA
    No EPA Regulations preventing progress
    No law suits for things that are obviously a scam on the employee part
    No Unemeployment benefits
    etc
    In other words, Americans are spoiled. Cherish it, because it might come to an end as a draft is coming.

    • @mortvald
      @mortvald Před 16 dny

      You got to be kidding me, america has the poorest work condition that even some poor nations would scoff at.
      Unemployment is a bitch though.

    • @BadWolf762
      @BadWolf762 Před 16 dny

      Russia can produce cheaper becase they don't have private contractors ripping them off, then paying off the politicians.

    • @user-ew2xh5ij1y
      @user-ew2xh5ij1y Před 16 dny +1

      You're wrong. Everything that you have listed is available in Russia. And sick leave is paid for up to three months. If the employee has not recovered in these three months, then the employer has the right to dismiss the employee without his desire to have unemployment benefits, it is just that there is practically no unemployment in Russia (less than 3%). There are also trade unions and lunch breaks, and there are criminal and administrative penalties for fraud at work or deceiving an employer.

    • @KirbyZhang
      @KirbyZhang Před 16 dny

      No bosses to imagine situations in other countries he knows nothing about

    • @Redfvvg
      @Redfvvg Před 15 dny +1

      Meal breaks? You have touched a sacred spot in Russia. The saying here is War by war, but lunch is on schedule.

  • @JBall-hd8bw
    @JBall-hd8bw Před 16 dny

    It takes more than shells. Artillery pieces are needed to fire the shells, and they've been taking a beating. Artillery tubes have a finite life span, they also have to be changed out. Trained crews are needed to make use of the available guns.

    • @Redfvvg
      @Redfvvg Před 15 dny +1

      There is enough secondary education in Russia to learn how to solve simple integrals. So the training period is not that long . Combat coordination is important, so they do not immediately send to the front. At least six months in school. The muzzles are changing, production has been established since ancient times.

  • @PeterMwansa-qw1ut
    @PeterMwansa-qw1ut Před 12 dny

    War is expensive

  • @yacir
    @yacir Před 16 dny

    Shell cases should be normally made from copper(its price skyrocketed), those white shells, what are they made of? Stainless steel?

    • @3epkaJLo_DyLLLu
      @3epkaJLo_DyLLLu Před 16 dny +2

      brass

    • @jerromedrakejr9332
      @jerromedrakejr9332 Před 16 dny +1

      The cases are made of brass... copper is too soft, too corrosive and wickedly expensive...The white cases are made of regular iron... not popular because they rust quickly, but they are suitable for wartime because they don't sit in warehouses... they are used quickly...

  • @ThySodomizer
    @ThySodomizer Před 14 dny

    3.000-4.000 USD is the average price per standrad 155mm artillery shell, M982Excalibur shell costs about 100.000-150.000 USD per shell. for
    comparison Krasnopol costs about 35.000 USD per shell so it's 3-5 times cheeper than the american substitute

    • @napobg6842
      @napobg6842 Před 7 dny

      Such comparisons are pointless between. NATO countries have no priority on artillery while Russia has. Ofc NATO shells would be more expensive. NATO militaries have high priority on precision ammo like missiles and their air forces.

    • @ThySodomizer
      @ThySodomizer Před 7 dny

      @@napobg6842 it's not pointless and very important for european taxpayers who pay for all this shit given by european countries, yes given for free they need to replenish supplies and produce for current needs of Ukraine in contrast to americans cause they don't give anyting for free, they just they provide under land lease and ukrainians and the rest of european taxpayers will have to pay for all this expensive shit so americans earn double

  • @moozyboozy3248
    @moozyboozy3248 Před 16 dny

    excalibur cost 68.000$

  • @gobbledygook888
    @gobbledygook888 Před 15 dny

    why sergei shoigo still there ,he is not the defense minister anymore .

  • @kamilhorvat8290
    @kamilhorvat8290 Před 16 dny

    the secret is simple - they don't have green deal

  • @forfairfair472
    @forfairfair472 Před 16 dny

    CONGRATULATION RUSSIA KEEP UP NON STOP

  • @prophetisraelking3759
    @prophetisraelking3759 Před 11 dny

    IF IN WAR ONE MAKES PROFIT AT THE BLOOD OF MASSES OF HUMAN LIFE, THEN KNOW THERE IS NO VAMPIRE ANYWHERE BUT MEN IN WHOM THERE IS NO HOLY SPIRIT

  • @michaele8442
    @michaele8442 Před 14 dny

    The rat is cornered. Putin know the meaning

  • @Secular_Iran_GE
    @Secular_Iran_GE Před 15 dny

    According to british intelligence and boris johnson ,Russia is out of ammo 😂😂😂

  • @markmilam3152
    @markmilam3152 Před 17 hodinami

    If this is true Ukraine has lost the war! The USA has built a 155 mm shell factory in Texas but still America's production of 155 mm shell is woefully too slow!

  • @honahwikeepa2115
    @honahwikeepa2115 Před 15 dny

    Biggest Washing Machine factory in Russia.

  • @remigiopalamini8378
    @remigiopalamini8378 Před 15 dny

    Sempre il popolo Rosso sempre
    Sempre

  • @lylelaw1238
    @lylelaw1238 Před 16 dny

    They must have 1000 or these plants scattered across russia, each cranking out 12 shells each

  • @Sam-dm4kz
    @Sam-dm4kz Před 16 dny

    Only in 1 plant there 12 other plants, quantity exceed to no limits.

  • @salamonbalint
    @salamonbalint Před 9 dny

    How Russia can produce 12000 shells a day? The answer is: statistics.

  • @SyaifulHamzah-hp9dk
    @SyaifulHamzah-hp9dk Před 6 dny

    Kapan FAB 500 di uji coba di Israel ,17 butir aja..., biar bisa lihat video nya

  • @captainbuck5969
    @captainbuck5969 Před 16 dny

    And we have President Poopy Pants.

  • @AmericanRomanEmpire
    @AmericanRomanEmpire Před 16 dny

    Good job America and the EU for awakening the “True Gaint”!

  • @catland101
    @catland101 Před 12 dny

    those shell made out of russian womans hair 🤣🤣🤣

  • @natgenesis5038
    @natgenesis5038 Před 16 dny

    Transportation costs more than production

  • @ijo1759
    @ijo1759 Před 15 dny

    The information content in this video is less than 30 seconds, but he drags on 8 minutes.

  • @Porter92
    @Porter92 Před 16 dny

    But you kept showing a shell that wasnt $1,000 a shell? You werw showing the new GPS or whatever its called shell they started using

  • @NewAlbionTV
    @NewAlbionTV Před 16 dny +1

    Because God himself guides Russia and Russia is doing God's work.

  • @privantomas
    @privantomas Před 14 dny

    I don't think such a shell costs 1000 USD. It is roughly ten times less.

  • @Mk19-xc9bm
    @Mk19-xc9bm Před 14 dny

    12.000 shells a day and still has to beg north Korea and iran for weapons

  • @smjawhar1390
    @smjawhar1390 Před 11 dny

    Us may be producing more than ussr

  • @Gunni1972
    @Gunni1972 Před 16 dny +1

    12 million $ a day? Elon Musk loses that much in half the time.

    • @Shyhalu
      @Shyhalu Před 16 dny

      LOL still butthurt at losing your checkmark?