The 2K12 "Kub" mobile surface-to-air missile system is a Soviet low to medium-level air defense system designed to protect ground forces from air attack. Known in the west by its NATO reporting name: SA-6 "Gainful", it was assigned the designation 2K12 by the Soviet ministry of defense. Each SA-6 battery consists of a number of similar tracked vehicles, one of which carries the 1S91 "Straight Flush" 25 kW G/H band radar equipped with a continuous wave illuminator, in addition to an optical sight. The battery also includes four triple-missile transporter erector launchers, referred to as TELs, and four trucks, each carrying three spare missiles and a crane. The TEL is based on a GM-578 chassis, while the 1S91 radar vehicle is based on a GM-568 chassis, all developed and produced by MMZ in Russia. The nose of the missile housed the artifact shown in the video: the 1SB4M Continuous-Wave Semi-Active Homing Coherent Dual Plane Monopulse Seeker. The device employs a parabolic section reflector antenna which produces monopulse sum, and pitch/yaw differential signals. The seeker also uses the difference in Doppler, between the illuminator carrier frequency, and backscatter from the target to estimate the closure rate between the missile and the target. An adaptive tunable narrowband filter is used to reject clutter. The seeker is analogue and in addition to producing pitch/yaw commands for the autopilot, it activates the proximity fuze, which in turn detonates the warhead of the missile. The SA-6 Surface-to-Air Missile was highly effective, as well as having very prolific production numbers. Most sources estimate that over 10,000 missiles were produced. The American counter-part to the SA-6 was the HAWK Surface-to-Air Missile. Much respect to the Russian engineers that created this very effective piece of hardware! You proved to be very worthy adversaries during the Cold War!
Ха, мы уже сейчас тебе еще раз показываем! Только это уже другие комплексы и ракеты! Не вздумай нападать на Россию - кто к нам с мечем придет, тот от него и погибнет!
Soviet teachers could ask you almost all the questions and say "okay, the grade is excellent", take the grade book, fill it out (subject, last name, signature), but not give a grade, give the grade book to the student and then ask the last question when he has already relaxed.
Soviet engineers were treated like dirt by their fellow countrymen. Going to free university and getting an engineering degree was seen the same as Americans view people who work at Walmart stocking shelves.
here they are all who created the 2k12 kub: chief designer of the installation A.A.Rastov) and the semi-active radar homing head of the rocket (chief designer of the head Yu.N. Vekhov, since 1960 - I.G.Hakobyan). The chief designer of the complex was appointed the head of OKB-15 V.V.Tikhomirov, the self-propelled launcher was created under the leadership of chief designer A.I.Yaskin in SKB-203 of the Sverdlovsk CHH, tracked chassis for combat vehicles of the complex were created in the Design Bureau of the Mytishchi Machine-Building Plant - (MMZ) of the Moscow regional CHH, chief chassis designer N.A.Astrov. An anti-aircraft guided missile for the complex was commissioned to create the Design Bureau of plant No. 134 GKAT, the development of the Kub missile complex was started under the leadership of chief designer I.I.Toropov.
yes. it would probably only need a few thousand transistors to replace the whole lower part, a microchip so small you would have a hard time seeing it with an optical microscope in todays technology. not much hightech looking indeed. but the machine that build this chip on the other hand....
@@thatdude3977 Analog tech is super, super impressive, but it also has a billion more failure points than an IC has. And you can make an IC for a device like this _way_ more water-resistant than the rats nest of parts on display here. You can take a board with an IC on it and just set it in a block of solid resin if you want to make it absolutely water-tight. Cooling shouldn't really be an issue, since it's really only designed to run for under a minute, anyway. It blows my mind what the engineers of old were able to do with discrete components and slide rules, but any modern IC blows it out of the water (or air) any day of the week by just about every metric.
That’s exactly why they are so expensive. A few hundred pounds of explosives could cost 5 grand, it’s all the tech that goes into it that really ramps up the price.
I bet in 50 years or so people gonna find these objects and will never believe that they were made by humans around mid 20th century, assuming that it were aliens😂
Shut up, stop giving ancient aliens more ideas for ruining history with bs. Already have enough of a headache from the fact that there still exist people who can't conceive that the Pyramids were built by humans..
Yea but try more like 500 years, and it'll be, "Alien tech, there's NO WAY they could have made this back then". It's like the pyramids, they're basically just a pile of cut rocks and everyone's always saying "Aliens had to build them, there's no way they could have done that themselves". I could see if they had TV antennas or radar dishes sticking out of the tops of them but come on, they're piles of rocks.
can't be that hard. even the thick skulled soviets managed. all though it meant that until 1990 they never improved their cars over early 1960s standards and had to import pretty much all other technological developments such as laser, com tech, etc.
This thing had the processing power of a flip phone, most of the cost of missiles now is the sensors and making sure it doesn't fall apart / blows up properly at mach 5
Analog doesn't work like modern digital computers. Its not doing math. Thing works on voltage difference between inputs. Today we use digital signals ( 0,1 on off ) to send instruction sets. This thing is actually really important, but fr digital electronics are smaller than analog. Analog has its benefits though. Digital has more. Lol.
People who made it and assembled it - huge respect. Top notch engineering, science and tech for it's time and conditions. I still wish we had more peacefull engineering
Я инженер. Смотря на это изделие я испытываю лишь восхищение и просто бескрайнее удивление, сколько трудов и скольких людей было вложено в этот проект. Это просто произведение искусства. Я родился уже в современной России, но имею честь, наблюдать и изучать подобные наследия великой державы - СССР.
Вот именно, что производство крайне неэффективное. Выход годных радиодеталей около 3%. С военной приемкой ещё меньше. Крепеж, особенно винты М3 - М5, отвратительного качества. Иногда импортные материалы в оболочке. Не именно в этом блоке, такой не разбирал. По мелочи много претензий. Для короткоживущего оборудования сойдёт качество, но цена получается космическая. Грамотная объемная компоновка, хорошая научная школа - это чувствуется. Как и отсутствие опыта массового производства и оптимизации...
ви мали сказати великої катівні і великого гулагу всіх народів, так правильніше. Ніякого величного спадку для держави де людина була гвинтиком як в цій болванці
There's no artistry in warfare. In fact it's the ultimate failing of humankind that differences can't be resolved and we end up putting all this effort into killing eachother. Think of where we could have been as a species without war. Everyone loses.
I find it crazy, that nowadays, you can compete the same function and even better with a single arduino board the size of a hand, with 3 servos, an IR sensor/camera, and some physical-chemistry analyser path finding software
@@phobos1963 To do what a SAM does you need a lot more processing power than an arduino. That missile is essentially an entire analog computer running, what I assume is, a complex PID control loop. Modern Missiles use FPGAs for all of the processing, and just that chip alone is upwards of 80 USD. The version you suggest would be very crude and might have a 1/100 hit rate.
As electronic technician student in poland i had closer look at Soviet and Polish electronic devides from 80/90~ and i can agree it's great piece of art!
how the fuck is it possible to make so many individual electronic circuits not only work together seamlessly but also reliably without fail. It is beyond me. Surely this must've taken thousands and thousands of hours of designing, testing and fixing by multiple hundreds of people no? I can't imagine any other way.
It’s crazy to think that as intricate as that unit is, it would still be considered horribly obsolete by today’s standards. Not to mention that for all of the precision manufacturing involved in its construction, it was still designed and intended to be something that would get blown up and never be able to be re-utilized.
Да наша электроника по сравнению с западной полное гавно. Посмотрите на вояджеры, которые хуярят сколько лет в космосе и еще работают. А наши об луну приводняются.
@@ВиталийДемин-л2у вообще то наши первые в мире в 1963 вроде высадили луноход на обратной строне луны .и наши же пока ещё ЕДИНСТВЕННЫЕ В МИРЕ в 68 отпраили спутник на венеру и даже сделали несколько снимков панормных. а твоя хвалёная сша пока ещё якобы подвиг своих дедов повторить не может.высадив космонавтов на луну да и ещё маск который обещал к 26 году заселять марс а вс что он добился это отправил машину в космос.
@@RussnsRsubHumns не совсем так. Моя мать работала на военном заводе и я там бывал. Во первых все компоненты проходили тестирование. На каждом полупроводнике стояло по несколько точек обозначавших различные проверки. Сборка выполнялась менее квалифицироваными людьми, выполнявшими монотонные операции. А вот регулировка была делом избранных. Обычный рабочий с небольшим разрядом получал 200р. Регулировщик высокого разряда мог получать 600р и ни о чем в жизни не думать. Булка хлеба стоила 20коп. Проезд на автобусе 5копеек квартплата 7рублей считайте сами. Многие из них были с высшим образованием. Сейчас труд такого человека в Америке стоил бы 15 - 20 тыс. Долларов. Возможно и больше. Если он ставил свою печать, будьте уверены. Самолёт вряд ли уйдёт от этой ракеты
I think i watched more than 10 times and still watching... It is definitely a piece of art... Everything designed on paper without computers. Circuit boards are handmade, you can see the bridges on boards... amazing... Respect to engineers...
It's insane to think that these things were *Mass fucking produced* Kind of insane not only they had to make it work, but they had to make it "simple" enough to where a factory worker can put one together.
@@micaheiber1419First of all the Netherlands produces the state of the art lithographie machines. Second Russia produces its own lithographie machines for the military applications fully in-house developed. Last but not least cope harder, the West has not one working hypersonic system while Russia has a variety including the means to shoot it out of the sky. To pretend this is fully autonomous developed by AI is coping mechanism. You simply don't have the necessary stem resources. And this is a good thing .Sucks buddy.😂
@@micaheiber1419military grade chips don't require advanced lithography, no one is putting 4090s in these things, it's more akin to an ECU in a car, they have to be cheap and durable and mass produce able
@@electronicgrinschthe hypersonic missile systems that Russia has are not worth developing. They are just solid rocket propelled with old guidance systems and poorly performing flight controls. They are arguably less effective than a well designed subsonic cruise missile that has low observability, longer range and higher payload. Developing a hypersonic weapon that is more effective than currently in service weapons is not what Russia has done. The "hypersonic" buzzword is what they were going for to capture the minds of the uneducated public and they have succeeded with that.
В СССР этих рабочих сразу после школы готовили 3 года в специальных учебно-производственных заведениях, которые назывались "Техникум". Им давали потом возможность поработать год или два на заводе (для чего давали "отсрочку" от призыва в армию) а потом они работали там до пенсии. В СССР умели мотивировать на долгий труд в одном месте. В основном, за счет системы накапливаемых льгот и привелегий, которые можно было потерять при переходе на другую работу.
I watched a couple documentaries about how the AIM-9 sidewinder and AGM-62 walleye were designed. These engineers are straight up brilliant. You know how at work there's usually 1 or 2 guys who are REALLY good at their job? These early missiles needed whole teams of top level experts like that. Straight up mind blowing.
@@angva1ion изучали Куб на военной кафедре в ВУЗе. но был только макет ракеты. вижу в первый раз как выглядит ГСН в реале. офицеры нам не давали ничего по самой ракете, есть и есть. но когда я заканчивал ВУЗ говорили что Куба больше не будет, а будут учить на Шилку.
Дааа, страшно думать сколько сил уходит на самоуничтожение (как человеческого рода). А могли бы уже населять другие планеты, например. Или бесплатную энергию вырабатывать
It's not a Soviet thing, it's what they had for the time and they all pushed the envelope. Any missile from the west (or anywhere else) will look essentially the same. The Russian/Soviet comment sections are the most delusional I've ever seen. It's a massive circle jerk compared to other videos of the same subject but the tech is from somewhere else.
I am sure to u it looked similar. I doubt u have even soldered two wires together, or know how to use a multimeter, let alone understand resistors, capacitors, transistors….. the missile is essentially an unmanned aircraft without landing gear. The technology and craftsmanship is amazing for that era
@@wojciechtraczyk7641в 1970 году твоя страна занималась массовыми убийствами вьетнамского гражданского населения и травила эту страну напалмом и дефолиантами.
Unfortunately, governments are run by humans, and some humans are evil. Therefore, you must dedicate money towards producing weaponry to defend yourself against those evil people or you may become a slave or end up being exterminated.
Unfortunately those pacifist ideas won't work, these tech won't be available without war😂 it's all designed with A Purpose, to be more effective at killing your target, downgrading those tech for civilian use is just a "side job"
В Советском Союзе образование было лучшим в мире. Каждый учащийся в институте понимал квантовую физику, вне зависимости от факультета. Это было потрясающе
It's often forgotten that Soviet Engineering and Science Education was extremely good indeed with a lot of effort on basic research. The advantage the West had was more advanced production capability.
The production capability thing is not even remotely true though.. I think people base the idea of western production being superior because they compare civilian automotive worlds & alike, where the goal in USSR was literally "reliable & cheap" instead of luxury or advanced. In fact it was as bad as "good enough" but this was all on purpose by the party, @ the beginning stages ComBloc automotive was pretty great, from all the crazy-advanced (for the time) off-roaders to the "Pobeda" there's some gems out there. But we couldn't go toe to toe with them on anything military or electronics, they had succeeded in microelectronics before the transistors even took off. The "Rod tubes" as we call them nowadays were getting close to IC levels of precision even though they were assembled & machined normally, whereas ICs are Photo-Chemical, which is on another level of capability. But that's as far as techniques, the materials though.. Soviet tech will go down in history & will never be surpassed in how ridiculously expensive it was. I have beside me some russian-produced regulating Triode vacuum tubes, they have a thick coating aaaallll over the anode of various precious metals which actively filter the tube off' gasses. It will literally never die until the cathode coating just gets burnt-out but if used for an hour at a time on occasion it WILL outlive my grandkids, even with the air slowly leaking into it through the glass as decades pass, all it needs to do is get hot & work at full blast for some time & it'll filter out everything down to a matter of a handful of molecules, it's even designed so that the electron-flow pushes gas molecules in a certain way to caatch them on the way back around! Even the ratings of Soviet Union were on another level, what we considered a 10.000 hour vacuum tube they would grade as 6.000 tops. The tubes I spoke off with all that Zirconium & other stuff were themselves only rated for 5.000 hours! They downrated it to heck, by American standards it would have been called a "specialty long-life tube" with a promise of 20.000 hours. Their standards were that high! The only country which came close to USSR when it came to splurging on materials is Nazi Germany as it was preparing for war, if Germany didn't have so much external support they simply wouldn't have afforded the materials necessary, so it is impressive USSR did this from end of war to it's collapse. This is all about (thermionic) electronics because that's my expertise, however I know some stuff about their engine manufacture & I know they were the first to make real solid & capable Diesels for the military & they even made 2-stroke Diesels like our Detroits and that's no easy feat & just in general it seems they really pushed the envelope on 2-strokes overall, at a time most of the world didn't even use tuned exhausts.
So you're telling me they R&D all their stuff just could manufacture it or at least in any quantity? Funny that they kept stealing western designs. Check out the planes the USSR had, so many of them look identical to western planes.. and yet their first flight is always 7-10 years later.
I have been lucky to see this level of engineering with my own eyes, this is so old and so high tech. The wiring, the stainless steel details and the handwork to wrap all those wires so perfectly, they all have their own path in the bundle, all the way from start to finish. We cant see the details in the video. But belive me these things are unhuman piece of art.
Blocks and standards. (a lot of text ahead) Apart from post production adjustment that's all you need. If you'll disassemble old soviet TV you'll see that it has a lot of blocks in separate casings that execute specific task. For example HF to 'middle frequency' conversion. And it could be same block in various TVs that you can interchange if needed. In my example it's "СК-Д-24". Same works for missile parts. Seeker has segments with standardized output signal. As long as it gives it on test device it might be considered to be used for later assembly. Last part is adjustment and idk how's it on the west, but in USSR there was a specific workers to adjust already assembled devices and they were experienced enough to make minor changes in circuits to counter parts parameters drift as well as finding out WHY it doesn't work as intended. And these guys were getting up to 30% higher salary than senior engineer of their production section.
Над такими вещами работают целые конструкторские бюро с кучей инженеров, у каждого своя задача, и на выходе из микро задач получается один результат-новая ракета
@@tieroneoperator635 Yea, that's exactly why it's so bloated and overly complicated, because it's using television electronics that each block is full of things a missile won't use and needs to have conversion interfaces for what a missile does need, like the part where it'll automatically lock onto a children's hospital.
@@tieroneoperator635 I'm high on reality, like the fact that the US version of that thing's electronics would fit in the palm of that guy's hand because it wouldn't be made out of surplus TV components, everything in it would be purpose built specifically for it instead and would be 10 times as reliable.
I worked in Serbia Belgrade military aviation maitanance institute in 90s. We had both western and Soviet equipement. French Gazzele, American Bells, Soviet Mi8, Migs, British Viper engines, RD33. By our very strict statistics, Soviet equipement had 3 times less failures (3times more reliable) than western equipement.
haha what a fking copium ruzzky shill lol. can aplly the same logic to soviet equipment....always breaking up and unreliable, cutting corners and shit. I understand that technologically advanced equipment was proly too much for ur sebian guys lol
my father servered in 82 for czechoslovakian army, part of east block, and even they were laughing at the state of russian top tear military equipment, because everything got stolen, bribed, corners were cut a half of things were not working and falling apart...only thing good is that even dumb ass mechanic can attempt to fix this crap to work for another day or two before ultimately failing again
That's not a Soviet thing, it's just the state of electronics at the time. Plus it's different for military and aerospace. You can go into any avionics bay of a passenger plane today and it's full of a wall of big, chunky computers the size of desktops that run only one single system on the aircraft. All those computers combined have the computing power of your iMac. The time period, and the fact that's it's military and aerospace have a preference for reliability and durability which is why it looks so clunky.
Этим можно любоваться даже, как арт объектом.Представить себе ,что это творение сотен рук великих людей ,и технологии которые производства которые скрыты.Притягивают своими вопросами и сикретами по сей день.
Вы не представляете это только капля в море в высокотехнологическом уровня развитие Советского союза. Очень жаль что огромная часть инженеров и промышленность работала в свере обороны, а гражданская часть промышленности с сфере машиностроение для граждан отстала и не развивалось. В то время как страны Япония и остров Тайвань вкладывали на будущее в изучений высоких технологий, чипирование, микросхем.
Well, even US had this back in cold war days. And now more complex missiles are made and used by military powers like US, Russia, China, India, Israel.
@@major2707 We are talking about 1945-1970s… I don’t think India had brahmos then… Brah is Brahmaputra river and mos is Moskva River from Russia… Indian & Russian engineers together built Brahmos…. But did India have HAL back then? No. Did India have Rocket of their own back then? No.
@@Arcane_Pulse-f7nisro has been launching rockets since 1960s, and the dude was talking about "now" not just "then" You are just a sore delusional loser
All those discrete components to solder onto PC boards. Imagine the factory lines of probably women hunched over them with soldering irons. Nowadays most of the circuitry could be made into a single custom analog chip or emulated/replaced with a digital picocomputer.
Maybe it’s just that modern components have much worse resistance to electronic warfare systems and the influence of electromagnetic waves, which is why such circuits are still used
@@RichardPalowitch That "free" labor had state-provided education (to produce engineers of this calibre), housing, healthcare and then received salary for clothes, food, other consumer stuff like television sets and washing machines (if they could find them of course). No slave labor could send a man into space, you are being a shitlord.
Нет. Это скорее уже артефакт.... Да, это произведения искусства ТОГО ВРЕМЕНИ, но по сравнению с нашими новейшими ракетами..... Равно как сравнивать кремниевое ружьё и автомат АК-47 😹😹😹
@@dajoro-iq4lqмоя мама считает меня честным и справедливым. Вырос как воспитали. А вот кем считают почти всех вас, жителей Европы и СГА, я лучше буду говорить😂😂😂😂
Все норм, бро! Дыхание гениального инженера сборщика "случайно" попало на платы этого устройства и оно стало неуязвимым не только для вражеских ракет, но и противовирусные от гриппа и Эбола!
@Dr.Kay_R yes..if you really start to think deep about it and go way back....every component comes from the earth and we are so smart to apply and combine the different properties to make it all do what we want.
@@TB3117It did by a lot. In the past we couldn't make a charging brick without a transformer, now you have fully controlled rectifiers that can directly be connected at 230V. And I wouldn't even classify this as a full power electronic circuit because most of the job is to filter, receive and interpret signal which drops more in the tellecomunications departament
I can’t even decide where to start looking. This looks so complex and yet so elegant. I guess a lot of circuit is dedicated to analog filter but the packing of it all is simply marvellous. Salute to those engineers who designed it!
Penghargaan tertinggi pantas disandangkan kpd pembuat mesin ini. pastinya beliau mendedikasikan seluruh hidupnya utk karya seni engineer ini. good job.
انا من اصول عربيه لهذا قررت ان اترك هذا التعليق في اللغه العربيه ... اتمنى ان تختفي كل هذه الوصلات التكنلوجية ويتم استبدالها بأشياء اخرى تنفع الانسانيه بدلا من استخدامها في تقليص عدد الكائنات الحيه بكافة انواعها بما فيها البشر انفسهم دعونا نتحد لتحقيق السلام والرقيّ بالانسانيه بدلاً من التشجيع على هذه الفوضى الانسان يبذل جهودة لمقاومه Entropy وليس لتسريعها اتوسل اليكم بأسم الانسانيه ان نسعى معاً للسلام وخدمة بعضنا 🙏🏻🫶🏻 احبكم جميعا وحبي لكم هو العامل المشترك بين جميع الاطراف المتنازعه لان المحبه والضمير والطبيعه الانسانيه هو اقوى من اي شيء اخر وهو ما يجمعنا معاً ❤❤❤
Брат ты прав, жму тебе руку. Излучатели из книги Обитаемый остров Стругацких работают слишком хорошо. Нормальным людям в любой стране нафиг не нужна война которую ведёт ее правительство. Я знаю, что когда нибудь нормальные люди свергнут этих деспотов во власти и народы нормально заживут друг с другом без использования надстройки в виде жадной, бессовестной, буржуйской верхушки. Но это будет очень не скоро, а если не будет такого, то будет просто медленное гниение человечества
Holy crap. That’s sophisticated. A lot of build time and expense for one missile that will go boom. It’s an entire radar site in one tiny package. Amazing. What year was this built?
Observing such a technological marvel, it is possible to affirm that the common accusations of espionage, copying or reverse engineering (made only against the USSR) do not make sense as they do not solve all the problems if whoever is making the copy does not have the necessary scientific knowledge to do so. it. Even for this it is necessary to have great scientific competence.
А кто вам сказал, что это не копия. Квалифицированных инженеров в СССР было много. Технические университеты были во всех крупных городах. Но идеи для них добывала Главное Разведывательное Управление. Причем воровались идеи не только военных разработок, а всей бытовой техники и радиотехники. Вся техника СССР - копии. Это доказано.
OMG! I recognize those sovietic transistors capsules. They can be ICs as well. Of course, the quality of that electronic pieces, is "another story" comparing with the sovietic products of RADIO/TV electronic pieces (most of them garbage in that time, except vacuum tubes). I remember some romanian electronists that were replacing those sovietic capacitors, even transistors or ICs from TVs with romanian (or western) equivalent pieces.
Thats cause we dont get anywhere without war. Your cars gps wouldnt exist without war. Your camera wouldnt exist without war. The internet wouldnt exist without war. A lot wouldnt exist without war.
В начале перестройки мне досталось множество "списанных" из аэропорта изделий советской военной техники. По качеству исполнения и материалов она радикально отличалась от всей привычной радио техники "из магазина", и производила впечатление инопланетной!
Это та самая "великая" система образования, после которой взрослые люди на полном серьёзе ставили заряжаться воду некой энергией рядом с телевизором? 🤡
Служил в Советской армии с1985по87.Сначала попал в Ковровскую учебку на механика водителя этих "Кубов",и как выяснилось потом на моё счастье в соседней батарее было много азиатов и постоянно дрались, поэтому нас перевели туда как бы для разбавления.Оказалось что там готовят мехводов на "Шилку" так я попал в ГСВГ.Эта вся лирика для Советских людей,а для всех остальных хотел рассказать про оружие СССР объясняя мощь и технологичность на пальцах.Так вот проводились армейские учения и стрельбы,наш дивизион состоял из двух боевых и одного материально-технического взвода обеспечения.Первый взвод это мы,а второй это "иголочники" на БМП 2, теперь представьте стрельбы,летит ракета от "Катюши" и внего попадает в догонку ракета от "иглы", теперь объясняю в летящую со скоростью около 1000км/ч канализационную трубу 100мм,догоняет и врезается черенок от лопаты, причём стрельба идёт в догонку.Ну а про свою "Тунгуску" можно очень много чего рассказать.
Сказки про совковый антиквариат никого не впечатляют. Сегодня западные технологии вырвались далеко вперед, а россияне до сих пор на древних Кубах и Шилках.
@@Yurii_Shapovalov Если говорить о оружии то и "всемогущее нато" Все на таком же антиквариате, а технологичные образцы так же под счет и СВО это показало, все кончилось не успев начаться.
@@pR_YanyaТы просто жертва своего телевизора, коль считаешь, что там что-то кончилось. Еще толком ничего не начиналось. Сравни высокоточные удары западных ракет по аэродромам Крыма и беспорядочную стрельбу по площадям российскими ракетами. Штаб Черноморского флота сравняли с землей в самом защищенном силами ПВО месте. И в то же время тысячи ракет, летящих на Киев приносят какой-то ущерб в основном жилым домам, и только при массированных атаках, истощающих ПВО.
Was an airlaunched weapons tech, AQF back then. Forward mess deck 7 decks down. Sparrow sidewinder shrike walleye and BQMs and their associated G and C test sets were my chilrens
Оцените мощь интеллекта инженеров Советской Империи - это всё было спроектировано без всяких там компьютеров и даже калькуляторов - кульман и логорифмическая линейка.
@@maxs3347 Yea that's why it's so bloated and overly complicated, the US versions electronics would fit in the palm of that guy's hand and be 10 time's as reliable from not having so much that one stupid little thing can break rendering it useless. It'd also be a lot simpler if they did away with the part where it'll automatically lock onto a children's hospital.
@@dukecraig2402 Эта система была создана в начале 1960-х. В те времена американская электроника была точно такой же. Посмотри какой-нибудь MIM-23 HAWK, там будет всё то же самое.
The 2K12 "Kub" mobile surface-to-air missile system is a Soviet low to medium-level air defense system designed to protect ground forces from air attack. Known in the west by its NATO reporting name: SA-6 "Gainful", it was assigned the designation 2K12 by the Soviet ministry of defense.
Each SA-6 battery consists of a number of similar tracked vehicles, one of which carries the 1S91 "Straight Flush" 25 kW G/H band radar equipped with a continuous wave illuminator, in addition to an optical sight. The battery also includes four triple-missile transporter erector launchers, referred to as TELs, and four trucks, each carrying three spare missiles and a crane. The TEL is based on a GM-578 chassis, while the 1S91 radar vehicle is based on a GM-568 chassis, all developed and produced by MMZ in Russia.
The nose of the missile housed the artifact shown in the video: the 1SB4M Continuous-Wave Semi-Active Homing Coherent Dual Plane Monopulse Seeker. The device employs a parabolic section reflector antenna which produces monopulse sum, and pitch/yaw differential signals. The seeker also uses the difference in Doppler, between the illuminator carrier frequency, and backscatter from the target to estimate the closure rate between the missile and the target. An adaptive tunable narrowband filter is used to reject clutter. The seeker is analogue and in addition to producing pitch/yaw commands for the autopilot, it activates the proximity fuze, which in turn detonates the warhead of the missile.
The SA-6 Surface-to-Air Missile was highly effective, as well as having very prolific production numbers. Most sources estimate that over 10,000 missiles were produced. The American counter-part to the SA-6 was the HAWK Surface-to-Air Missile.
Much respect to the Russian engineers that created this very effective piece of hardware! You proved to be very worthy adversaries during the Cold War!
Ха, мы уже сейчас тебе еще раз показываем! Только это уже другие комплексы и ракеты! Не вздумай нападать на Россию - кто к нам с мечем придет, тот от него и погибнет!
That's wild. All that just to be blown up. Simply wild.
Well pin your own comment.
Приятно услышать такой отзыв.
Komrade, please pin this valuable piece of information.
The old-school circuit boards are absolute artwork
The whole thing is. Gimme a magnifying Glass and a weekend
He's lying omg he killed r2d2 and now he's dismembering the body for disposal! 😮😢 😂
@throatjamma what?
Sad that they were just made to blow up. There's a lot of work that went into this.
How much?
The engineer didn't use chatgpt to pass his exams
This guys are chatgpt....!!!!
ok
Soviet teachers could ask you almost all the questions and say "okay, the grade is excellent", take the grade book, fill it out (subject, last name, signature), but not give a grade, give the grade book to the student and then ask the last question when he has already relaxed.
Soviet engineers were treated like dirt by their fellow countrymen. Going to free university and getting an engineering degree was seen the same as Americans view people who work at Walmart stocking shelves.
And education was free
As an electronics engineer, I salute who ever designed this.
Of course, it will be a collective design
here they are all who created the 2k12 kub: chief designer of the installation A.A.Rastov) and the semi-active radar homing head of the rocket (chief designer of the head Yu.N. Vekhov, since 1960 - I.G.Hakobyan). The chief designer of the complex was appointed the head of OKB-15 V.V.Tikhomirov, the self-propelled launcher was created under the leadership of chief designer A.I.Yaskin in SKB-203 of the Sverdlovsk CHH, tracked chassis for combat vehicles of the complex were created in the Design Bureau of the Mytishchi Machine-Building Plant - (MMZ) of the Moscow regional CHH, chief chassis designer N.A.Astrov. An anti-aircraft guided missile for the complex was commissioned to create the Design Bureau of plant No. 134 GKAT, the development of the Kub missile complex was started under the leadership of chief designer I.I.Toropov.
Was probably drawn on paper too
With a roman salute
@@daniilparackhin96892k12 KUB shows a large vehicle with rockets on Google - this is tiny
Engineers made this without internet. ..... Respect++😢
Home Automation
Home Automation System
LED is currently: {{ 'ON' if led_state else 'OFF' }}
Toggle LED
Relay is currently: {{ 'ON' if relay_state else 'OFF' }}
Toggle Relay
Temperature: {{ temperature }}°C
Humidity: {{ humidity }}%
View Logs
Also
from flask import Flask, render_template, request, redirect, url_for
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
import Adafruit_DHT
import sqlite3
from datetime import datetime
app = Flask(__name__)
# Set up GPIO
GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BCM)
LED_PIN = 18
RELAY_PIN = 23
DHT_SENSOR = Adafruit_DHT.DHT22
DHT_PIN = 4
GPIO.setup(LED_PIN, GPIO.OUT)
GPIO.setup(RELAY_PIN, GPIO.OUT)
# Initial state for devices
led_state = False
relay_state = False
# Database setup
def init_db():
conn = sqlite3.connect('home_automation.db')
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('''CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS logs (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
device TEXT,
action TEXT,
timestamp TEXT
)''')
conn.commit()
conn.close()
init_db()
def log_action(device, action):
conn = sqlite3.connect('home_automation.db')
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('INSERT INTO logs (device, action, timestamp) VALUES (?, ?, ?)',
(device, action, datetime.now().strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')))
conn.commit()
conn.close()
@app.route('/')
def index():
humidity, temperature = Adafruit_DHT.read_retry(DHT_SENSOR, DHT_PIN)
return render_template('index.html', led_state=led_state, relay_state=relay_state, temperature=temperature, humidity=humidity)
@app.route('/toggle_led', methods=['POST'])
def toggle_led():
global led_state
led_state = not led_state
GPIO.output(LED_PIN, led_state)
log_action('LED', 'ON' if led_state else 'OFF')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/toggle_relay', methods=['POST'])
def toggle_relay():
global relay_state
relay_state = not relay_state
GPIO.output(RELAY_PIN, relay_state)
log_action('Relay', 'ON' if relay_state else 'OFF')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/logs')
def logs():
conn = sqlite3.connect('home_automation.db')
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM logs ORDER BY timestamp DESC')
logs = cursor.fetchall()
conn.close()
return render_template('logs.html', logs=logs)
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)
finally:
GPIO.cleanup()
And yeah I am 13
They also made the internet without internet.
@@Shock_Treatmentyes
You can't make it even with it ;))
@@Shock_Treatment😅😅😅
It's funny how old high-tech looks more high-tech than the high-tech of today. 😅
yes. it would probably only need a few thousand transistors to replace the whole lower part, a microchip so small you would have a hard time seeing it with an optical microscope in todays technology. not much hightech looking indeed. but the machine that build this chip on the other hand....
Ikr. A board the size of mobilr phone would probably preplace it now @@Digi20
Well, working analog will forever be impressive.
@@Digi20 your micro chip would be damaged by a raindrop 😂
@@thatdude3977 Analog tech is super, super impressive, but it also has a billion more failure points than an IC has. And you can make an IC for a device like this _way_ more water-resistant than the rats nest of parts on display here. You can take a board with an IC on it and just set it in a block of solid resin if you want to make it absolutely water-tight. Cooling shouldn't really be an issue, since it's really only designed to run for under a minute, anyway.
It blows my mind what the engineers of old were able to do with discrete components and slide rules, but any modern IC blows it out of the water (or air) any day of the week by just about every metric.
It's crazy that so much work goes into something that's one time use. That thing lives its whole life in less than 30 seconds.
Yet it can save many lives which is priceless
@@mrsheabutter At the same time it can take many lives as well😅
Not really though, being surface to air it is designed to home in on an aerial moving target…so not exactly a weapon of mass destruction.
That’s exactly why they are so expensive. A few hundred pounds of explosives could cost 5 grand, it’s all the tech that goes into it that really ramps up the price.
It has to stay ready for many years, in difficult conditions, and the operate perfect for 30 seconds.
Keep in mind - this thing was supposed to work in a missile flying at Mach 2.8.
And full analog
В России уже есть ракеты летящие свыше 21 маха и это факт 😊
@@Nohchichychenно москвичи Китайские 🤭
@@Nohchichychen21 мах?а почему не бластеры?
It wasn't made to work in a missile. Was made to catch a missile's trajectory and send data to a countering missile
I bet in 50 years or so people gonna find these objects and will never believe that they were made by humans around mid 20th century, assuming that it were aliens😂
можетБЫТЬ
Shut up, stop giving ancient aliens more ideas for ruining history with bs.
Already have enough of a headache from the fact that there still exist people who can't conceive that the Pyramids were built by humans..
❤@@ПгдьдждтМротол
Yea but try more like 500 years, and it'll be, "Alien tech, there's NO WAY they could have made this back then".
It's like the pyramids, they're basically just a pile of cut rocks and everyone's always saying "Aliens had to build them, there's no way they could have done that themselves".
I could see if they had TV antennas or radar dishes sticking out of the tops of them but come on, they're piles of rocks.
Да вы оптимист, 50 лет даёте.
Could you imagine designing that before a computer
Idk man, they kinda did that
can't be that hard. even the thick skulled soviets managed. all though it meant that until 1990 they never improved their cars over early 1960s standards and had to import pretty much all other technological developments such as laser, com tech, etc.
@@uschurchя тебе скажу больше, у нас продавались в детских магазинах радио конструкторы "мальчиш"и многое другое и это для детей.
@@esport687 Есть ли у вас опыт?У меня есть военная рация российского производства
@@uschurchand what is your technical achievement? What do you do? What did you design?
I always wondered why missiles were so expensive, makes sense now.
This thing had the processing power of a flip phone, most of the cost of missiles now is the sensors and making sure it doesn't fall apart / blows up properly at mach 5
just imagine the poor bastids that designed this and then presented it to the pentagon, and they were like "we'll take it, but make it smaller"
@@someasiandude4797you're being generous with the flip phone processor comparison :)
Analog doesn't work like modern digital computers. Its not doing math.
Thing works on voltage difference between inputs.
Today we use digital signals ( 0,1 on off ) to send instruction sets.
This thing is actually really important, but fr digital electronics are smaller than analog. Analog has its benefits though. Digital has more. Lol.
@@RoboArc Analog is great at calculus ngl
People who made it and assembled it - huge respect. Top notch engineering, science and tech for it's time and conditions. I still wish we had more peacefull engineering
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🫱🏻🫲🏼
Indeed
And all this just to kill other people
Sadly Without war technology would advance slowly
А надо ли оно быстрее? Люди жили бы и радовались в мире,и экологию меньше отравляли! Мирных забот до конца жизни хватит.
Я инженер. Смотря на это изделие я испытываю лишь восхищение и просто бескрайнее удивление, сколько трудов и скольких людей было вложено в этот проект. Это просто произведение искусства. Я родился уже в современной России, но имею честь, наблюдать и изучать подобные наследия великой державы - СССР.
Это что? Доплеровская БРЛС с фазированной решёткой?
Вот именно, что производство крайне неэффективное. Выход годных радиодеталей около 3%. С военной приемкой ещё меньше. Крепеж, особенно винты М3 - М5, отвратительного качества. Иногда импортные материалы в оболочке. Не именно в этом блоке, такой не разбирал. По мелочи много претензий. Для короткоживущего оборудования сойдёт качество, но цена получается космическая. Грамотная объемная компоновка, хорошая научная школа - это чувствуется. Как и отсутствие опыта массового производства и оптимизации...
ви мали сказати великої катівні і великого гулагу всіх народів, так правильніше. Ніякого величного спадку для держави де людина була гвинтиком як в цій болванці
@@GoodMan-lw9yl Говоря СССР я именно и подразумеваю - народ. Нет народа - нет государства.
@@GoodMan-lw9yl наверно сейчас у Вас на Украине всё прекрасно. Можно выехать куда угодно и свободно ходить по улицам.
I'm an engineer and this thing impresses me to no end. What a work of art!
😂of art yes
I'm almost graduating as a mechanical engineer and this thing terrifies and astonishes me!!!!!
designing this mechanically is also a nightmare
There's no artistry in warfare. In fact it's the ultimate failing of humankind that differences can't be resolved and we end up putting all this effort into killing eachother. Think of where we could have been as a species without war. Everyone loses.
Лучшей покойся смиром чем узнать это я чабан из россия знаю что такой я скоро зделаю лучше 😅😅 мир вам
😮😮😮
R2D2, what have they done to you?!
😂
😂 this one was good
They put that fatboy on a diet! lol
😂😂😂😂😂
Ахахах. Мы сделали из него нормальный образец вооружения!
Now I need a 2 hour video dissecting exactly how this works that looks unbelievably cool
Specifically a Technology Connections video :)
I find it crazy, that nowadays, you can compete the same function and even better with a single arduino board the size of a hand, with 3 servos, an IR sensor/camera, and some physical-chemistry analyser path finding software
@@phobos1963 To do what a SAM does you need a lot more processing power than an arduino. That missile is essentially an entire analog computer running, what I assume is, a complex PID control loop. Modern Missiles use FPGAs for all of the processing, and just that chip alone is upwards of 80 USD. The version you suggest would be very crude and might have a 1/100 hit rate.
@@Dylan-ee6qg And through the magic of buying 2 of them...
@@NetAnon Just make it adjust the fins so it flies wherever the seeker sees the heat? A then go boom when it's close enough. What's so complex?
As electronic technician student in poland i had closer look at Soviet and Polish electronic devides from 80/90~ and i can agree it's great piece of art!
Russian and Polish, or say PRL and Soviet. Whole system was constructed by ethnic Russians.
@@synth1002 More likely by ethnic Ukrainians. During the times of the USSR, the rocket industry was located in Ukraine.
@@gustorel3041 Developed and engineered by Russians. Dig deeper and you will find info by yourself, it's best that way.
Cheers
how the fuck is it possible to make so many individual electronic circuits not only work together seamlessly but also reliably without fail. It is beyond me. Surely this must've taken thousands and thousands of hours of designing, testing and fixing by multiple hundreds of people no? I can't imagine any other way.
Yep. Slow progress over generations. We kept adding new stuff every generation
Well, “reliably without fail” isn’t quite right, in fact these were quite unreliable
Because soviets were terribly bad in microelectronics.
North Korea makes this for Russia
@@Schlipperschlopper наркотики употребляете?
It’s crazy to think that as intricate as that unit is, it would still be considered horribly obsolete by today’s standards. Not to mention that for all of the precision manufacturing involved in its construction, it was still designed and intended to be something that would get blown up and never be able to be re-utilized.
Spot on!
My thoughts exactly
hey now obsolete don't mean useless, remimber right took for right job lol
This has a history of shooting down b fifty two phantoms, f sixteens and a shit ton of sky hawks.
Everthing to day is the same principal but smaller components.
У наших дедов не было интернета, у них были мозги.
А как же один дед заявил, что "никому наши галоши не были нужны"
Да наша электроника по сравнению с западной полное гавно. Посмотрите на вояджеры, которые хуярят сколько лет в космосе и еще работают. А наши об луну приводняются.
Sí
Sí 😊
@@ВиталийДемин-л2у вообще то наши первые в мире в 1963 вроде высадили луноход на обратной строне луны .и наши же пока ещё ЕДИНСТВЕННЫЕ В МИРЕ в 68 отпраили спутник на венеру и даже сделали несколько снимков панормных. а твоя хвалёная сша пока ещё якобы подвиг своих дедов повторить не может.высадив космонавтов на луну да и ещё маск который обещал к 26 году заселять марс а вс что он добился это отправил машину в космос.
This is not a machine...but a wonderful piece of art
1962 y.
Not a machine? BS. It obviously is. It is both, I agree with that.
Science is art
As a diy electronics enthusiast, I really like military grade components🥲🥲
Who not ...
That cable management is god like💀
Military grade isn’t high quality, it’s the cheapest and functional option
@@cronchulus5489I know, but it looks so high quality (emphasis on looks).
@@accountrandomnumber182 fair, but that’s just tactical aesthetic
I see hundreds of hours of detailed assembly work embodied in that thing.
Так и есть. Всё паялось, собралось и настраивалось вручную. Уверен. Если подать питание, она заработает. Качество.
Thousands. Easily. It is absolutely insane
@user-bv4sp9lw1e ... there is no quality in Russia, just quantity!
@@RussnsRsubHumnsit was quality. Not in term of super precise or smth but that doesn’t say it’s not quality.
@@RussnsRsubHumns не совсем так. Моя мать работала на военном заводе и я там бывал. Во первых все компоненты проходили тестирование. На каждом полупроводнике стояло по несколько точек обозначавших различные проверки. Сборка выполнялась менее квалифицироваными людьми, выполнявшими монотонные операции. А вот регулировка была делом избранных. Обычный рабочий с небольшим разрядом получал 200р. Регулировщик высокого разряда мог получать 600р и ни о чем в жизни не думать. Булка хлеба стоила 20коп. Проезд на автобусе 5копеек квартплата 7рублей считайте сами. Многие из них были с высшим образованием. Сейчас труд такого человека в Америке стоил бы 15 - 20 тыс. Долларов. Возможно и больше. Если он ставил свою печать, будьте уверены. Самолёт вряд ли уйдёт от этой ракеты
I think i watched more than 10 times and still watching... It is definitely a piece of art... Everything designed on paper without computers. Circuit boards are handmade, you can see the bridges on boards... amazing... Respect to engineers...
It's insane to think that these things were *Mass fucking produced*
Kind of insane not only they had to make it work, but they had to make it "simple" enough to where a factory worker can put one together.
Это ещё старая ракета. Представляете какой сложный сейчас гиперзвуковой "Кинжал"?
@@micaheiber1419First of all the Netherlands produces the state of the art lithographie machines. Second Russia produces its own lithographie machines for the military applications fully in-house developed. Last but not least cope harder, the West has not one working hypersonic system while Russia has a variety including the means to shoot it out of the sky. To pretend this is fully autonomous developed by AI is coping mechanism. You simply don't have the necessary stem resources. And this is a good thing .Sucks buddy.😂
@@micaheiber1419military grade chips don't require advanced lithography, no one is putting 4090s in these things, it's more akin to an ECU in a car, they have to be cheap and durable and mass produce able
@@electronicgrinschthe hypersonic missile systems that Russia has are not worth developing. They are just solid rocket propelled with old guidance systems and poorly performing flight controls. They are arguably less effective than a well designed subsonic cruise missile that has low observability, longer range and higher payload. Developing a hypersonic weapon that is more effective than currently in service weapons is not what Russia has done. The "hypersonic" buzzword is what they were going for to capture the minds of the uneducated public and they have succeeded with that.
В СССР этих рабочих сразу после школы готовили 3 года в специальных учебно-производственных заведениях, которые назывались "Техникум". Им давали потом возможность поработать год или два на заводе (для чего давали "отсрочку" от призыва в армию) а потом они работали там до пенсии. В СССР умели мотивировать на долгий труд в одном месте. В основном, за счет системы накапливаемых льгот и привелегий, которые можно было потерять при переходе на другую работу.
Вот это произведение искусства! Слава Советским инженерам!
Слава Украине👍
@@nemo_tod ага, в составе Советского Союза
@@nemo_todв составе России)
@@nemo_todВ составе республики Крым😊
Правильно говорить: -"слава героям ТЦК"
@@VanyaGru лучший ответ
Holy hell i need an 8 hour video dissecting the whole schematic
Mr. Carlsons Lab? 😅 might not be his forte though
Mr. Carlsons Lab? 😅 might not be his forte though
I watched a couple documentaries about how the AIM-9 sidewinder and AGM-62 walleye were designed. These engineers are straight up brilliant. You know how at work there's usually 1 or 2 guys who are REALLY good at their job? These early missiles needed whole teams of top level experts like that. Straight up mind blowing.
@@StrangeGarage docu names? :)
Then, don't be poisoned by the water you drink suddenly.
from an engineering perspective, this is an artwork and simply amazing
Брат, я русский, лучше давайте дружить! Война ничего не написано😢. Давайте станцию МИР в космос запускать и покорять космос вместе!
As an engineer, I always find it shocking how much effort is put into killing each other
Конкретно этот радар создан для перехвата ракет, то есть для защиты
We human always make sure there will be less people to enjoy the things we invented.
@@angva1ion изучали Куб на военной кафедре в ВУЗе. но был только макет ракеты. вижу в первый раз как выглядит ГСН в реале. офицеры нам не давали ничего по самой ракете, есть и есть. но когда я заканчивал ВУЗ говорили что Куба больше не будет, а будут учить на Шилку.
Intelligence may just be a form of insanity.
Дааа, страшно думать сколько сил уходит на самоуничтожение (как человеческого рода).
А могли бы уже населять другие планеты, например. Или бесплатную энергию вырабатывать
لايمكنني سوى أن اتخيل ان صانع هذه وهب كل حياته من أجل صناعة شي ما سأحتاجه للمزيد من الراحة في حياتي. شكرا لك أيها العبقري تستحق الشكر
Там были тысячи создателей.
Это создано не для твоего комфорта, а для того, чтобы обнаружить тебя и послать к тебе ракету
Honestly I thought this was gonna be an insane Lego build
But this is even better
Soviet military electronic systems are always so beautifully engineered and put together.
It's not a Soviet thing, it's what they had for the time and they all pushed the envelope. Any missile from the west (or anywhere else) will look essentially the same.
The Russian/Soviet comment sections are the most delusional I've ever seen. It's a massive circle jerk compared to other videos of the same subject but the tech is from somewhere else.
😅I opened up an alarm clock in the 80s. Looked identical.
Tell them Bro, Tell Them! 😂😂😂
did it also count back-words from 100?
Well, this one was created in the 60s....
I am sure to u it looked similar. I doubt u have even soldered two wires together, or know how to use a multimeter, let alone understand resistors, capacitors, transistors….. the missile is essentially an unmanned aircraft without landing gear. The technology and craftsmanship is amazing for that era
@@chevy4x466why are you so hurt? Lmao
Needs to be in a museum
It will be
@@InertOrdnanceWhere?
in museum of black market@@乂Hi乂
It would've been so freaking funny if the channel replied like
" It.... it _is_ "
Who are you to say, Indianapolis Jones?
Imagine all these years what could’ve been created if human governments put all this energy and money into peaceful endeavors!
Gdyby w 1970 rozpoczęli współpracę to w ciągu 5 lat moglibyśmy wylądować na księżycu i założyć bazę do lotu na Marsa.
@@wojciechtraczyk7641в 1970 году твоя страна занималась массовыми убийствами вьетнамского гражданского населения и травила эту страну напалмом и дефолиантами.
*RADAR was invented by the British to defend against Germany in WW2 so it was life or death development, war always speeds up technology.* 😂😂😂
Unfortunately, governments are run by humans, and some humans are evil. Therefore, you must dedicate money towards producing weaponry to defend yourself against those evil people or you may become a slave or end up being exterminated.
Unfortunately those pacifist ideas won't work, these tech won't be available without war😂 it's all designed with A Purpose, to be more effective at killing your target, downgrading those tech for civilian use is just a "side job"
Now imagine how easier it is to shake hands and help each other instead of fighting
СССР сила 👍
Wow!! Imagine the time it took to piece together those circuit boards and wiring! This is amazing. The art of technology.
Только человек делает оружие для убийства себе подобных.
One of the most beautiful pieces of engineering I’ve laid my eyes on…
В Советском Союзе образование было лучшим в мире. Каждый учащийся в институте понимал квантовую физику, вне зависимости от факультета.
Это было потрясающе
@@СергейВашунинне неси херни)
@@СергейВашунин I have a master in applied physics and I’m married to a doctor from Ukraine 🇺🇦. I know 👌
Soviet's electronic engineering is a joke
@@bh2908nah
It's often forgotten that Soviet Engineering and Science Education was extremely good indeed with a lot of effort on basic research. The advantage the West had was more advanced production capability.
The production capability thing is not even remotely true though.. I think people base the idea of western production being superior because they compare civilian automotive worlds & alike, where the goal in USSR was literally "reliable & cheap" instead of luxury or advanced. In fact it was as bad as "good enough" but this was all on purpose by the party, @ the beginning stages ComBloc automotive was pretty great, from all the crazy-advanced (for the time) off-roaders to the "Pobeda" there's some gems out there.
But we couldn't go toe to toe with them on anything military or electronics, they had succeeded in microelectronics before the transistors even took off. The "Rod tubes" as we call them nowadays were getting close to IC levels of precision even though they were assembled & machined normally, whereas ICs are Photo-Chemical, which is on another level of capability.
But that's as far as techniques, the materials though.. Soviet tech will go down in history & will never be surpassed in how ridiculously expensive it was. I have beside me some russian-produced regulating Triode vacuum tubes, they have a thick coating aaaallll over the anode of various precious metals which actively filter the tube off' gasses. It will literally never die until the cathode coating just gets burnt-out but if used for an hour at a time on occasion it WILL outlive my grandkids, even with the air slowly leaking into it through the glass as decades pass, all it needs to do is get hot & work at full blast for some time & it'll filter out everything down to a matter of a handful of molecules, it's even designed so that the electron-flow pushes gas molecules in a certain way to caatch them on the way back around!
Even the ratings of Soviet Union were on another level, what we considered a 10.000 hour vacuum tube they would grade as 6.000 tops. The tubes I spoke off with all that Zirconium & other stuff were themselves only rated for 5.000 hours! They downrated it to heck, by American standards it would have been called a "specialty long-life tube" with a promise of 20.000 hours. Their standards were that high! The only country which came close to USSR when it came to splurging on materials is Nazi Germany as it was preparing for war, if Germany didn't have so much external support they simply wouldn't have afforded the materials necessary, so it is impressive USSR did this from end of war to it's collapse.
This is all about (thermionic) electronics because that's my expertise, however I know some stuff about their engine manufacture & I know they were the first to make real solid & capable Diesels for the military & they even made 2-stroke Diesels like our Detroits and that's no easy feat & just in general it seems they really pushed the envelope on 2-strokes overall, at a time most of the world didn't even use tuned exhausts.
So you're telling me they R&D all their stuff just could manufacture it or at least in any quantity? Funny that they kept stealing western designs. Check out the planes the USSR had, so many of them look identical to western planes.. and yet their first flight is always 7-10 years later.
....was? Still is.
I have been lucky to see this level of engineering with my own eyes, this is so old and so high tech. The wiring, the stainless steel details and the handwork to wrap all those wires so perfectly, they all have their own path in the bundle, all the way from start to finish. We cant see the details in the video. But belive me these things are unhuman piece of art.
Russian oldest technology 🇷🇺 is awesome
Ты не представляешь какое количество золота и серебра в этом изделии
Back when engineering was closer to wizardry
That's old, but is beautiful
That is one Sophisticated piece of Art ✔️
CAN you imagine, trying to figure out all those parts that had to work in sync together. That was a genius who made that.
Blocks and standards. (a lot of text ahead)
Apart from post production adjustment that's all you need.
If you'll disassemble old soviet TV you'll see that it has a lot of blocks in separate casings that execute specific task. For example HF to 'middle frequency' conversion. And it could be same block in various TVs that you can interchange if needed. In my example it's "СК-Д-24".
Same works for missile parts. Seeker has segments with standardized output signal. As long as it gives it on test device it might be considered to be used for later assembly.
Last part is adjustment and idk how's it on the west, but in USSR there was a specific workers to adjust already assembled devices and they were experienced enough to make minor changes in circuits to counter parts parameters drift as well as finding out WHY it doesn't work as intended. And these guys were getting up to 30% higher salary than senior engineer of their production section.
Над такими вещами работают целые конструкторские бюро с кучей инженеров, у каждого своя задача, и на выходе из микро задач получается один результат-новая ракета
@@tieroneoperator635
Yea, that's exactly why it's so bloated and overly complicated, because it's using television electronics that each block is full of things a missile won't use and needs to have conversion interfaces for what a missile does need, like the part where it'll automatically lock onto a children's hospital.
@@dukecraig2402 tf you on?
@@tieroneoperator635
I'm high on reality, like the fact that the US version of that thing's electronics would fit in the palm of that guy's hand because it wouldn't be made out of surplus TV components, everything in it would be purpose built specifically for it instead and would be 10 times as reliable.
I worked in Serbia Belgrade military aviation maitanance institute in 90s.
We had both western and Soviet equipement. French Gazzele, American Bells, Soviet Mi8, Migs, British Viper engines, RD33. By our very strict statistics, Soviet equipement had 3 times less failures (3times more reliable) than western equipement.
That's very interesting to learn! Thanks for posting the info!
Makes sense. They’re designed to work. Not cut corners to make profits that please shareholders.😊
@@conzmoleman The soviet union had 'shareholders' in a sense too. Cut costs= money into the pockets of high level officials
haha what a fking copium ruzzky shill lol. can aplly the same logic to soviet equipment....always breaking up and unreliable, cutting corners and shit. I understand that technologically advanced equipment was proly too much for ur sebian guys lol
my father servered in 82 for czechoslovakian army, part of east block, and even they were laughing at the state of russian top tear military equipment, because everything got stolen, bribed, corners were cut a half of things were not working and falling apart...only thing good is that even dumb ass mechanic can attempt to fix this crap to work for another day or two before ultimately failing again
Still looks pretty high tech, makes you wonder kind of weapons we have developed in the 50+ years since 🤔
Yes. Are we really making progress? Are we just improving on old things? (Of course, I know about interceptor lasers.)
Настоящее произведение искусства... И этой красотой люди убивают друг друга.
I like how old soviet stuff looks so crude but they made it all work
This looks fucking "crude" to you? Laughable, lmfaoooooooooooooo 🙄🙄🙄
They were utilitarian.
That's not a Soviet thing, it's just the state of electronics at the time. Plus it's different for military and aerospace. You can go into any avionics bay of a passenger plane today and it's full of a wall of big, chunky computers the size of desktops that run only one single system on the aircraft. All those computers combined have the computing power of your iMac. The time period, and the fact that's it's military and aerospace have a preference for reliability and durability which is why it looks so clunky.
It doesn't look crude, it's absolutely a work to behold...
crude?
Этим можно любоваться даже, как арт объектом.Представить себе ,что это творение сотен рук великих людей ,и технологии которые производства которые скрыты.Притягивают своими вопросами и сикретами по сей день.
C'est quoi
я видел такой на мотоцикл ставят под Харьковом. неймоверно любоваться долго можно
Just wow… i’m a half trained mechanical and 20 year software engineer… and to reverse engineer that would still take a lifetime. Wow.
It's just a radio transmitter with a couple of motors. It's way more easier to design a new one than figure out this one.
You could be an engineer for 5000 years and you will still be useless
В советском союзе умели заставлять людей работать 😂 Причём, за нищенские зарплаты.
@@Roma-tz9vgты несешь ерунду полную! Внутри компьютер который рассчитывает траекторию ракеты, которую нужно поразить
I can't even put a slice of that together.
Channel locks, pliers and ratchets are my tools. 😂😂😂
Maybe that makes me a modern day caveman.
Вы не представляете это только капля в море в высокотехнологическом уровня развитие Советского союза. Очень жаль что огромная часть инженеров и промышленность работала в свере обороны, а гражданская часть промышленности с сфере машиностроение для граждан отстала и не развивалось. В то время как страны Япония и остров Тайвань вкладывали на будущее в изучений высоких технологий, чипирование, микросхем.
The Soviet engineers were crazy.
Well, even US had this back in cold war days. And now more complex missiles are made and used by military powers like US, Russia, China, India, Israel.
@@Dr.Kraig_RenIndia? 😂😂😂
@@Arcane_Pulse-f7nbrahmos,Agni missiles🙂
@@major2707 We are talking about 1945-1970s… I don’t think India had brahmos then… Brah is Brahmaputra river and mos is Moskva River from Russia… Indian & Russian engineers together built Brahmos…. But did India have HAL back then? No. Did India have Rocket of their own back then? No.
@@Arcane_Pulse-f7nisro has been launching rockets since 1960s, and the dude was talking about "now" not just "then"
You are just a sore delusional loser
Imagine designing that 😭
All those discrete components to solder onto PC boards. Imagine the factory lines of probably women hunched over them with soldering irons. Nowadays most of the circuitry could be made into a single custom analog chip or emulated/replaced with a digital picocomputer.
Maybe it’s just that modern components have much worse resistance to electronic warfare systems and the influence of electromagnetic waves, which is why such circuits are still used
У меня возникает гордость за наших учëных при виде таких научных разработок
Home Automation
Home Automation System
LED is currently: {{ 'ON' if led_state else 'OFF' }}
Toggle LED
Relay is currently: {{ 'ON' if relay_state else 'OFF' }}
Toggle Relay
Temperature: {{ temperature }}°C
Humidity: {{ humidity }}%
View Logs
from flask import Flask, render_template, request, redirect, url_for
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
import Adafruit_DHT
import sqlite3
from datetime import datetime
app = Flask(__name__)
# Set up GPIO
GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BCM)
LED_PIN = 18
RELAY_PIN = 23
DHT_SENSOR = Adafruit_DHT.DHT22
DHT_PIN = 4
GPIO.setup(LED_PIN, GPIO.OUT)
GPIO.setup(RELAY_PIN, GPIO.OUT)
# Initial state for devices
led_state = False
relay_state = False
# Database setup
def init_db():
conn = sqlite3.connect('home_automation.db')
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('''CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS logs (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
device TEXT,
action TEXT,
timestamp TEXT
)''')
conn.commit()
conn.close()
init_db()
def log_action(device, action):
conn = sqlite3.connect('home_automation.db')
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('INSERT INTO logs (device, action, timestamp) VALUES (?, ?, ?)',
(device, action, datetime.now().strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')))
conn.commit()
conn.close()
@app.route('/')
def index():
humidity, temperature = Adafruit_DHT.read_retry(DHT_SENSOR, DHT_PIN)
return render_template('index.html', led_state=led_state, relay_state=relay_state, temperature=temperature, humidity=humidity)
@app.route('/toggle_led', methods=['POST'])
def toggle_led():
global led_state
led_state = not led_state
GPIO.output(LED_PIN, led_state)
log_action('LED', 'ON' if led_state else 'OFF')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/toggle_relay', methods=['POST'])
def toggle_relay():
global relay_state
relay_state = not relay_state
GPIO.output(RELAY_PIN, relay_state)
log_action('Relay', 'ON' if relay_state else 'OFF')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
@app.route('/logs')
def logs():
conn = sqlite3.connect('home_automation.db')
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM logs ORDER BY timestamp DESC')
logs = cursor.fetchall()
conn.close()
return render_template('logs.html', logs=logs)
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)
finally:
GPIO.cleanup()
Пааедь в Сибирь,если даедешь,прогордись за нищету,убожество жизни рабов империи Зла.
@@olegvitalich8978а ты знаешь какую страну назвали Империей Зла?
всё направляли на оружие, а для людей ничего не делали. В итоге выиграла Америка, потому что там были вещи для людей, а не только для войны!
If only everyday Russians were scientists who love the truth applied the bible firstly and was that of the first section of deuteronomy 28
The amazing part is, almost all of that is point-to-point wiring. That's A LOT of manual labor.
Yeah, but The laborwas free.
@@RichardPalowitch That "free" labor had state-provided education (to produce engineers of this calibre), housing, healthcare and then received salary for clothes, food, other consumer stuff like television sets and washing machines (if they could find them of course). No slave labor could send a man into space, you are being a shitlord.
@@RichardPalowitch no. base salary is 100-200 rubles and for a skilled professional 400-1000. in 1970 one ruble was worth 1.6 US dollars
people continue to find remains from an ancient and more advanced civilization
Нет. Это скорее уже артефакт....
Да, это произведения искусства ТОГО ВРЕМЕНИ, но по сравнению с нашими новейшими ракетами.....
Равно как сравнивать кремниевое ружьё и автомат АК-47 😹😹😹
I bet your mom thinks you are funny@@Sam-tw1zt
What????? 😂😂😂😂😂
Did you not understand the caption?
@@dajoro-iq4lqмоя мама считает меня честным и справедливым. Вырос как воспитали.
А вот кем считают почти всех вас, жителей Европы и СГА, я лучше буду говорить😂😂😂😂
people continue to dumbly think this technology was ever lost. smh
Beautiful piece of artwork
Exactly, that's an art work.
It's not beautiful back then it was a disaster 😅
точно, это ничто иное как искуство
It has a pretty good service record@@easter-nmgr4086
As an electrical engineer
I salute to everyone that designed it, builded it... and the most to the people that had troubleshoot it.
As an electronics engineer, can you imagine how you would design such a device? I just want to know if I'm the only one retarded in this regard or yes
и не забываем, что вся эта сложнейшая система должна выдерживать разрушительные перегрузки и вибрации во время старта и полета ракеты👏
Иначе на голову упадёт? 😊
Это хрень в сравнении с нагрузкой на любой поршень :)
Да там синяя изолента, переживать не за что
Все норм, бро!
Дыхание гениального инженера сборщика "случайно" попало на платы этого устройства и оно стало неуязвимым не только для вражеских ракет, но и противовирусные от гриппа и Эбола!
Бро .. это все проходит вибро стол .. с вибрацией на разных частотах …
Вот такие "галоши" делали во время СССР !
И сегодня делают ...
@@MaxKremenchugТут 100% локализация.А сейчас и чипы свои не делают
а сколько в ней злата.. 😊!
Совкодрочеры на позициях? Члены в руках ? Вперёд!!
А царь горох, то и не знает😂
Какая красотища! Слава советским инженерам! 😊😊😊
Стебешься?
@@СергейКузнецов-п4в7щ а в чем стеб? Я как выпускник университета Томского Политеха в восторге от этого шедевра
Просрали вы,эту никчёмную славу.
Сало а не слава
@@askarik736 наркоман, иди ищи ямку со спайсиком
That sound absolutely give me relaxing vibes ( after all I am also Engineer 😅)
USSR..really..was great power that time
Not really, they had their problems
who hadn't?)
German technology
@@justaguy3403 every nation had problems during those times
@@rightystorm2004 Soviets quickly moved away from german technology as much of it was worse.
Especially when it comes to rocketry.
Гениальная работа инженеров 🎉
И сборщиков
Вещь! Вся из золота!
What my grandmother sees when I am plugging HDMI in the TV:
I am in awe by the knowledge of the guy designing and applying these electronics and mechanics..really genius level stuff
real collab between engineers designers and electricians
Generations of human knowledge. Every generation added something of their own
@Dr.Kay_R yes..if you really start to think deep about it and go way back....every component comes from the earth and we are so smart to apply and combine the different properties to make it all do what we want.
Visually explains the cost of a missile. It's not just a rocketpropelled bomb, its an automated kamikaze robot.
The architecture is absolutely stunning.
تصميم للعلماء وليس مهندسين عاديين ،، من بين الف شخص خبير يوجد واحد فقط قادر على عمل هاذا الفن ،،
It's crazy to think that whole thing is on one small chip now.
Not completely, power electronics doesn't decreased so much
@@TB3117It did by a lot. In the past we couldn't make a charging brick without a transformer, now you have fully controlled rectifiers that can directly be connected at 230V.
And I wouldn't even classify this as a full power electronic circuit because most of the job is to filter, receive and interpret signal which drops more in the tellecomunications departament
Little does he know, that if he turn it 5 times left, 2 times right, 4 times up, it will activate the nuclear bomb inside.
I can’t even decide where to start looking. This looks so complex and yet so elegant. I guess a lot of circuit is dedicated to analog filter but the packing of it all is simply marvellous. Salute to those engineers who designed it!
it looks like that bucket macintosh
The bottom half is just there for show. Ha Ha.
Penghargaan tertinggi pantas disandangkan kpd pembuat mesin ini. pastinya beliau mendedikasikan seluruh hidupnya utk karya seni engineer ini. good job.
Still crazy to me something this complex and expensive was meant to be used once then completely destroyed and there were thousands made
cca 10000 were made
انا من اصول عربيه لهذا قررت ان اترك هذا التعليق في اللغه العربيه ...
اتمنى ان تختفي كل هذه الوصلات التكنلوجية ويتم استبدالها بأشياء اخرى تنفع الانسانيه بدلا من استخدامها في تقليص عدد الكائنات الحيه بكافة انواعها بما فيها البشر انفسهم
دعونا نتحد لتحقيق السلام والرقيّ بالانسانيه بدلاً من التشجيع على هذه الفوضى
الانسان يبذل جهودة لمقاومه Entropy وليس لتسريعها
اتوسل اليكم بأسم الانسانيه ان نسعى معاً للسلام وخدمة بعضنا 🙏🏻🫶🏻
احبكم جميعا وحبي لكم هو العامل المشترك بين جميع الاطراف المتنازعه لان المحبه والضمير والطبيعه الانسانيه هو اقوى من اي شيء اخر وهو ما يجمعنا معاً ❤❤❤
Хорошо сказано 👏👏👏
🎉
Well said. ❤
Брат ты прав, жму тебе руку. Излучатели из книги Обитаемый остров Стругацких работают слишком хорошо. Нормальным людям в любой стране нафиг не нужна война которую ведёт ее правительство. Я знаю, что когда нибудь нормальные люди свергнут этих деспотов во власти и народы нормально заживут друг с другом без использования надстройки в виде жадной, бессовестной, буржуйской верхушки.
Но это будет очень не скоро, а если не будет такого, то будет просто медленное гниение человечества
That's exactly what R2D2 would say!
You can’t even imagine how many of them were disassembled for copper and other metals after the Soviet Union collapse
Там куча палладия
Imagine all this technology and complexity is lost for one purpose and ends.
Holy crap. That’s sophisticated. A lot of build time and expense for one missile that will go boom. It’s an entire radar site in one tiny package. Amazing. What year was this built?
1967-1979
67 год
@@dmitriyivanov4688 Thanks.
1967
Observing such a technological marvel, it is possible to affirm that the common accusations of espionage, copying or reverse engineering (made only against the USSR) do not make sense as they do not solve all the problems if whoever is making the copy does not have the necessary scientific knowledge to do so. it. Even for this it is necessary to have great scientific competence.
А кто вам сказал, что это не копия. Квалифицированных инженеров в СССР было много. Технические университеты были во всех крупных городах. Но идеи для них добывала Главное Разведывательное Управление. Причем воровались идеи не только военных разработок, а всей бытовой техники и радиотехники. Вся техника СССР - копии. Это доказано.
Soviet engineering ASMR
OMG! I recognize those sovietic transistors capsules. They can be ICs as well.
Of course, the quality of that electronic pieces, is "another story" comparing with the sovietic products of RADIO/TV electronic pieces (most of them garbage in that time, except vacuum tubes).
I remember some romanian electronists that were replacing those sovietic capacitors, even transistors or ICs from TVs with romanian (or western) equivalent pieces.
Humans have put soo much effort to blow Up each other its very sad 😢 they can't build up each other
Thats cause we dont get anywhere without war. Your cars gps wouldnt exist without war. Your camera wouldnt exist without war. The internet wouldnt exist without war. A lot wouldnt exist
without war.
Надежность сборки, качество производства особенно военной приёмки СССР, мои аплодисменты!
Инженеры, сборщики, слесаря вы были крутые ребята!
В начале перестройки мне досталось множество "списанных" из аэропорта изделий советской военной техники. По качеству исполнения и материалов она радикально отличалась от всей привычной радио техники "из магазина", и производила впечатление инопланетной!
Да....... и бабок это стоило мама не горюй.
@@графЛуканорСкорее всего так и есть. Я вот китайскую электронику разбираю, и это мне кажется какие-то инопланетные технологии...
Ты имел дело с военной электротехникой? Это просто был пздц.
@@графЛуканоря в начале 90ых понял что это ещё то говнище.
Иногда смотришь на некоторые изделия Советского Союза,и восхищаешься.Ощущения что это отголоски более развитой цивилизации!
Так и есть
Согласен, вот делали раньше,
А щас говорят только калоши выпускали
Такая более развитая цивилизация с самым лучшим образованием, передовой наукой взяла и самоликвидировалась. Почему?
особенно когда ни с чем нормальным нет возможности сравнить ага.... до цивилизации так и не дожили)
@@IskanderEmbaevyeltsin
Cool! Jeez...where do you find this stuff?!
The great education system of Soviet time shall be back again
Это та самая "великая" система образования, после которой взрослые люди на полном серьёзе ставили заряжаться воду некой энергией рядом с телевизором? 🤡
@@Porosenok_miasnoy English please
@@Porosenok_miasnoy English
No, please!
As an HVAC tech, those circuit boards and copper tubing are making me salivate.
I WANNA TAKE IT APART AND PUT IT BACK TOGETHER!!!
That's too beautiful and painfully complex! ❤
I now see why a single missile is so freaking expensive
Служил в Советской армии с1985по87.Сначала попал в Ковровскую учебку на механика водителя этих "Кубов",и как выяснилось потом на моё счастье в соседней батарее было много азиатов и постоянно дрались, поэтому нас перевели туда как бы для разбавления.Оказалось что там готовят мехводов на "Шилку" так я попал в ГСВГ.Эта вся лирика для Советских людей,а для всех остальных хотел рассказать про оружие СССР объясняя мощь и технологичность на пальцах.Так вот проводились армейские учения и стрельбы,наш дивизион состоял из двух боевых и одного материально-технического взвода обеспечения.Первый взвод это мы,а второй это "иголочники" на БМП 2, теперь представьте стрельбы,летит ракета от "Катюши" и внего попадает в догонку ракета от "иглы", теперь объясняю в летящую со скоростью около 1000км/ч канализационную трубу 100мм,догоняет и врезается черенок от лопаты, причём стрельба идёт в догонку.Ну а про свою "Тунгуску" можно очень много чего рассказать.
Сказки про совковый антиквариат никого не впечатляют. Сегодня западные технологии вырвались далеко вперед, а россияне до сих пор на древних Кубах и Шилках.
А,что это вообще на видео?
@@Yurii_Shapovalov Если говорить о оружии то и "всемогущее нато" Все на таком же антиквариате, а технологичные образцы так же под счет и СВО это показало, все кончилось не успев начаться.
@@pR_YanyaТы просто жертва своего телевизора, коль считаешь, что там что-то кончилось. Еще толком ничего не начиналось. Сравни высокоточные удары западных ракет по аэродромам Крыма и беспорядочную стрельбу по площадям российскими ракетами. Штаб Черноморского флота сравняли с землей в самом защищенном силами ПВО месте. И в то же время тысячи ракет, летящих на Киев приносят какой-то ущерб в основном жилым домам, и только при массированных атаках, истощающих ПВО.
@@Yurii_Shapovalov сверх невидимый и сверх технологичный истребитель Стелс, был сбит сверх древней системой , совковой, как вы говорите.
I never really put much thought into the complexity of missiles and rockets. It’s a work of Mechanical and art
Was an airlaunched weapons tech, AQF back then. Forward mess deck 7 decks down. Sparrow sidewinder shrike walleye and BQMs and their associated G and C test sets were my chilrens
Оцените мощь интеллекта инженеров Советской Империи - это всё было спроектировано без всяких там компьютеров и даже калькуляторов - кульман и логорифмическая линейка.
я бы не был так уверен
Не писди. Компьютеры были в ссср
@@sovograf в чем не был бы так уверен?
@@maxs3347
Yea that's why it's so bloated and overly complicated, the US versions electronics would fit in the palm of that guy's hand and be 10 time's as reliable from not having so much that one stupid little thing can break rendering it useless.
It'd also be a lot simpler if they did away with the part where it'll automatically lock onto a children's hospital.
@@dukecraig2402 Эта система была создана в начале 1960-х. В те времена американская электроника была точно такой же. Посмотри какой-нибудь MIM-23 HAWK, там будет всё то же самое.
Such a complex sophisticated expensive machine only to be used for 1 time
Произведение искусства!
Как такое можно было сделать??? Рассчитано карандашом на бумаге и в голове. Это сейчас компьютер просчитает, в 3д, с размерами, на мониторе
Чтоб вам в дома такое искусство прилетало
@@vebAction кому надо тому и прилетят
@@vebActionэто защита, а не нападение
@@vebActionхрюкни ще раз
Глаза кайфуют когда смотришь на качество советской военной электроники🫡
And with Vodka
@@ironworkerfxr7105, that's only your stereotype
вьіпей водки,
@@dentzw80 must only be the guys I hang out with.. they all fled the CCCP
A classic familyhood staple. I remember when my dad first got one for the home. The whole family used to stay up watching that thing for hours.
What kind of a family did you grow up in that your dad just casually brought one of these things home?
Almost every family had at least one of these things, for safety purpose, yknow @@Lorant1984
Astounding level of complexity.