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M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) | LONG RANGE FIREPOWER 

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The M142 HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) is a lighter version of the M270 MLRS multiple launch rocket system. It was intended for the US airborne troops and marines. It entered service with the US Army and Marine Corps in 2005. A total procurement of 900 launchers was planned. Some sources report that 540 HIMARS launcher were built. It has been exported to Jordan (12), Singapore (18) and the United Arab Emirates (20). Some other export customers are considering this system. In 2022 a small number of HIMARS systems were delivered to Ukraine in order to defend against the Russian invasion. In 2022 Estonia ordered 6 HIMARS systems.
The HIMARS fires the same rockets as the M270 MLRS, however it carries only one pack with a total of 6 rockets. It offers half firepower of the M270 MLRS. The HIMARS fires a full range of the M270 rockets, including rockets with HE-FRAG and cluster warheads.
M26 is a baseline 227 mm rocket. It is 3.96 m long and weights 307 kg. It has a range of 32 km and. It is fitted with a 120 kg dual-purpose warhead with 644 bomblets. It is effective against troops and vehicles. These rockets were produced in large numbers. However the M26 had a storage life of 25 years. During that time more capable and accurate rockets were introduced. The M26 was withdrawn from service. In 2009 the US military began to remove its complete stock of over 360 000 M26 artillery rockets from the inventory.
M26A1 is an extender-range rocket with a range of 45 km. It carries a smaller dual-purpose warhead with 518 bomblets. This rocket was additionally fitted with a self-destruct fuse. These rockets have been retired from the US service. Remaining stocks are being destroyed.
M26A2 is another extended-range rocket. It has a range of 45 km. It uses a dual-purpose warhead with multiple bomblets. This rocket was produced in relatively small numbers. In 2009 only 3 924 of these artillery rockets were in the US inventory. It is no longer used by the US military.
M30 guided rocket. It is also referred as Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System, Guided MLRS, or GMLRS. This weapon was developed to counter the threat of hostile long-range rocket and cannon artillery to the US forces. It was a replacement for the basic M26 and M26A2 ER artillery rockets. The M30 rocket has a range of 65-70 km and has substantially improved accuracy due to the use of built-in GPS system. It is fitted with a dual-purpose warhead with 404 bomblets. The M30 provides the same lethality as the M26 and M26A2 but fewer rockets are required to hit the target. By 2019 this rocket was no longer used by the US Military. The remaining M30 rockets were converted to M30A1 and M31A1 variants.
M30A1, M30A2 GMLRS-AW is a version of the GMLRS with a so called "alternative warhead". This is a 90 kg airburst fragmentation warhead. It explodes about 10 m above ground to disperse its 160 000 pre-formed fragments. This warhead is effective against area targets, including troops, vehicles, radars, forward command posts. Also it meets the US unexploded ordnance policy requirements. Range of fire is 65-70 km. This rocket was tested by the US Army in 2014 and was adopted shortly afterwards. Production commenced in 2015. Eventually it replaced in service the M30 guided rockets. The M30A1 could be a designation of the M30 rockets, fitted with alternative warhead.
M31 is a so called GMLRS-U or "unitary" rocket with a single 90 kg High Explosive (HE) warhead. Warhead has 23 kg of explosive content. Range of fire is 65-70 km. Some sources report that maximum range is 92 km. Production commenced in 2005. These rockets are used by the US military.
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M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) | LONG RANGE FIREPOWER

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31 июл 2022

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Комментарии : 485   
@_Matsimus_
@_Matsimus_ Год назад
💥 💣 Check out our partnership clothing brand! Attire For Effect💣 💥 www.attireforeffect.com 📸 Also follow them on Instagram: #attire_for_effect
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
I was actually working on Ft. Sill when these were being tested. In fact, I was working on patrol the day they were supposed doing the first live airborne test of a combat loaded HIMARS. Instead they decided to touchdown at the airfield on post after they had dropped all the airborne troops out the sides. I was blocking a main road near the DZ, got to watch one guy bounce! Think he had a broken leg was all but his chute definitely streamered.
@brokeandtired
@brokeandtired Год назад
Ukraine literally just punched out a moving 30 car Russian troop train (that was traveling many miles behind enemy lines) with a HIMARS missile.
@gnexjeff
@gnexjeff Год назад
@Matsimus You should consider getting onto Nebula so you can produce your videos without fear of RU-vid's restrictions.
@tusk3260
@tusk3260 Год назад
about time someone showed this. Theres a bunch of military statistics channels who claims that Canada doesn't have any self propeled rocket projectors. (rocket artillery vehicles) Such as VSB Defence for example.
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
He never said that the Canadian military *have* these systems. In fact some quick Google-fu reveals that they in fact no longer have any rocket artillery. Furthermore, Matt himself even did a video about the retirement of the Canadian self propelled Howitzers, literally all that’s left are the towed field guns. So VBS Defense would be correct if they stated that the Canucks didn’t have an MLRS type platform.
@shawnadams1965
@shawnadams1965 Год назад
Back in the 1980s when I was stationed at Grafenwöhr the MLRS and 155 tracked Artillery would emplace themselves along our Tac-site fence line. (I was in a HAWK unit) And when they fired they rocked our world quite literally. When the 155 fired you would actually miss a step while walking. Good times.
@niklas2378
@niklas2378 Год назад
my dad served in a HAWK unit🙂
@jonny-b4954
@jonny-b4954 Год назад
Good ole' HAWK
@niklas2378
@niklas2378 Год назад
@@jonny-b4954 i served in a rb-70 unit
@spyreal7628
@spyreal7628 Год назад
Yep. The power of artillery is awesome. I was an M-1 mechanic in Germany.
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
Although I was in the Army myself, I was a Cold War era Air Force brat stationed on Spangdhalem from 88-91 and we had a Hawk battery on base.
@gOtze1337
@gOtze1337 Год назад
I dont think its that much of an Drawback that HIRMAS has only half the Payload of the M270-MLRS, because of the quick reload. Also, the most limiting Factor for Rocket-Artillery is probably Logistics.
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
The early MLRS took a couple minutes for it to go from the stowed position to slewed onto the target area, so mass volley fire to prevent counter battery was definitely a big thing. The HIMARS and updated MLRS both are capable of from stowed to target area & back to stowed seconds and as such I don’t think it’s as big of an issue. I believe it’s probably quicker to get back on the move after firing for a good shoot and scoot. Maybe leave the MLRS (in NATO/allies usage) for primarily the ATACMS instead of GMLRS.
@gOtze1337
@gOtze1337 Год назад
@@soonerfrac4611 I have not served on an MLRS System, but just by the short Time it needs to reload and shoot off all its Rockets. There must be a lot of traffic going on to supply these Sytems, just imagine a hole Battery, how much tonnage and volume they can go through in just one Day. Especially if u look at the size and weight of these Missle's.
@thomasborgsmidt9801
@thomasborgsmidt9801 Год назад
a very sound remark from gOtze 1337 - in my view. What is happening with HIMARS is that heavy artillery is back at the brigade level. The M110 205 mm is one clumsy beast. With a shell weight of 100 kg and 50-60 kg fpr the charge. Not only do you need a crew of 13 and a support vehicle PR. GUN. You allmost need engineering support to load the damned thing. Rate of fire was 3 rounds pr TWO minutes in "burst". "Sustained" fire 1 round every two minutes. With that rate of fire the enemy could get a squadron of Lancasters airborne..... What did it achieve? A paltry 30-40 km range with its snub nosed 37 caliber tube. Let's say: Hardly worth the effort. It is true that the rocket projectiles of the HIMARS are a LOT more expensive, but if they hit the objective it is well worth the price. I would like the HIMARS put on a larger truck chassis so they can have suitable crew accomodation, as they are going to be on the road 24/7 - if for nothing else to reload from a local airfield.
@jarink1
@jarink1 Год назад
I'm sure that HIMARS crews are also really glad they don't have to do track maintenance, either!
@basswarnow
@basswarnow Год назад
In terms of tonnage, artillery - be it rocket or grenade - is by far the most taxing item for any logistics train. I remember hearing that around 60-80% of the weight capacity is used for those units - but they are also responsible for around the same ratio of enemy casualties, so it's worth the effort.
@mrjmorovis
@mrjmorovis Год назад
During the 1st Gulf War we watched a whole battalion of M270's fire all their rockets in a few minutes. They stretch towards the horizon. It was surreally beautiful.
@IMAN7THRYLOS
@IMAN7THRYLOS Год назад
There are combat scenarios with HIMARS that go way out of box for artillery. For example that a HIMARS will link with other assets and shoot against ships or that F-35s will be designating targets to the HIMARS to engage.
@stinopharan5528
@stinopharan5528 Год назад
Wouldn't that call an AShM? Lockheed already planning an airlaunched version too
@petersouthernboy6327
@petersouthernboy6327 Год назад
Yep, Link 16 👌
@georgecristiancripcia4819
@georgecristiancripcia4819 Год назад
Romania bought 54 himars even before russia invaded ukraine.And they already received the first units.The contract got a loot of flack bc it was expensive and considered unnecesary but after how they perform in ukraine a lot of people(not russian trolls) changed their opinion.
@mirandela777
@mirandela777 Год назад
And how do you know well in Ukr ?! CNN told you and , you obvious you believe all BS right ? Cuz ALL the evidence we saw until now, were some piss poor little holes of 25cm in a bridge pavement ... Do not let the murican pitch sale BS obscure your perspective, dude . Murica have all the interest to inflate the numbers and qualities, since many murican colonies will pay big bucks for it.( romenia included, :p )
@tonyvu2011
@tonyvu2011 Год назад
Many people changed their mind after Russian invasion of Ukraine, especially the Germans, Finns and Swedes :)
@mirandela777
@mirandela777 Год назад
@@tonyvu2011 - those "many peoples" are lazy ignorant who never bother to educate themselves in the situation of Donbass since 2014. Sadly, those ignorant have no clue about the drama and tragedy the peoples of Donbass suffer in last 8 years at the hands of ukronazi and Kiev regime. 14 000 killed in last 8 years, and several thousands more since 2022.
@Marvin-dg8vj
@Marvin-dg8vj Год назад
I think a lot of countries are looking carefully at this .In an artillery war it looks very effective
@gusgone4527
@gusgone4527 Год назад
There is room for both rocket and gun/tube artillery on the peer v peer battlefield of today and tomorrow. Cost is still a limiting factor when it comes to fielding assets in peace time. That alone will ensure the continuation of 155mm guns in the armed forces. There is a distinct possibility that the lines between self propelled artillery and main battle tanks could become blurred. If 130mm, 140,, or 150mm + tank tubes become the norm. It only requires an autoloading turret with high angles of elevation. For an MBT to fulfil the indirect fire role. It all depends which compromises military procurement choose to make.
@prfwrx2497
@prfwrx2497 Год назад
Also, the 155mm is an operational level asset, yet HIMARS and GMLRS systems can also be used to bridge the operational-strategic gap. Case in point, Ukraine annihilating enemy ammunition dump, bridges, EW systems, and rail freight carrying engineering vehicles. These are strikes which bridges the gap between operations and strategy.
@Bob_Betker
@Bob_Betker Год назад
Gus: Exactly, the two types of artillery complement each other. You can't really do sustained fire support from rocket artillery that it where tube artillery excels. In a high intensity conflict, one of the first critical missions for rocket artillery will be to take out the opponent's counter-battery assets (radar, sound-detection, etc.) to enable towed or SP tube artillery to then provide sustained fire support. However, not every military is going to be fighting a high-intensity conflict; there are low to medium intensity conflicts where towed tube artillery is sufficient.
@mattwarner8273
@mattwarner8273 Год назад
Doesn't the tubed arty use a rifled barrel whereas MBTs have all moved to smooth bore?
@eypandabear7483
@eypandabear7483 Год назад
StarCraft siege tank confirmed?
@gusgone4527
@gusgone4527 Год назад
@@mattwarner8273 Yes, it would be interesting to see which choice is made for a MBT expected to fulfil an artillery role. It's always going to be a compromise but things seem to be moving that way already. With both wheeled and tracked IFV's sporting MBT calibre weapons in tank like turrets.
@k53847
@k53847 Год назад
I remember a MLRS launch at a firepower demonstration at Ft Sill. Insanely loud, monstrous signature. But massive effects on target.
@johncashwell1024
@johncashwell1024 Год назад
Home of the Field Artillery, I was there in 2002 for basic
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
Spent my entire career there as both an MP & DACP from 2k through 2013.
@niklas2378
@niklas2378 Год назад
never heard the mlrs.. did it sound like "moaning minnie"?
@k53847
@k53847 Год назад
@@niklas2378 It's like the space shuttle taking off. Just massive noise.
@rael5469
@rael5469 Год назад
I heard the same thing from a guy's who's son manned such a system. He got to see a live fire demonstration. Said the same thing. Insanely loud and impressive as hell.
@qjimq
@qjimq Год назад
We were working on a duel rocket cartridge for this system back around 2005 at Ray The On. We could fit two rockets into each; not the 6 or 1 options you've seen, It might be for home use only and not even sent to Iraq or Afghanistan. We've had a lot of trouble selling top of the line stuff to Japan and Israel (most publicized) and others that land up on Chinese runways, thus the F-22 wasn't exported. These two rockets out performed the single rocket in range and in a lot of other ways. I know it was purchased in quantity so it was approved after I left the program, as we were just working on the engineering sample(s) at the earlier date. I remember reading about it online, so it isn't a super secret anymore, but the spec's might be.
@jeffreyprezalar220
@jeffreyprezalar220 Год назад
The Israeli's do have the m270 mlrs, maybe 70 of them, but they decided to expand the amount of rockets they could launch seeing a need for smaller and larger guided rockets. So they took the launcher mechanism off the m270 and put it on a truck that could mix up to 3 different types of rockets at a time.
@nikolairomanov4496
@nikolairomanov4496 Год назад
You're thinking of the ATACMS ballistic missile
@Shaun_Jones
@Shaun_Jones Год назад
You’re thinking of the Precision Strike Missile, which is supposed to enter full service next year. 500+ kilometer range.
@qjimq
@qjimq Год назад
@@Shaun_Jones That's the one I bet, because I remember something about the range and being astonished. Again, I was more into manufacturing it and the end cost so what I knew was limited to parts and logistics to build the MF'er.
@JohnDoe-pv2iu
@JohnDoe-pv2iu Год назад
It is pretty cool for an older guy to hear about the advancement of weapons over time... It is really Cool (and kinda funny) to see a young man like Mat (especially for the folks who have watched his channel since way before he was old enough to enlist), realizing that the current weapons will have the rookies of the very near future calling him an 'Old-Timer' about Artillery! And as funny as that sounds, when it happens, Mat is gonna feel pretty damn proud inside. He'll probably fuss and tell them to Knock that Sh*t Off... But he will be proud of being an 'Old Timer' that knows how Fire missions are calculated and executed (and Not by some damn Machines!)... Nice video, Take Care Mat and Everyone, John
@purplefood1
@purplefood1 Год назад
I feel like having worked in an era where computers have been employed to deadly results it would be a weird thing to turn around and denigrate them, like a pilot saying radar is bad because it's computerised
@JohnDoe-pv2iu
@JohnDoe-pv2iu Год назад
@@purplefood1 I completely agree with you about using the best technology available. I also know that a Retired friend of mine was a Navigator on a B52 during the Cold War. He said that every mission they flew in training included a 'leg' of the flight plan that utilized 'celestial navigation' (using the stars through the observation port). Those 'Damn Machines' is an older guys Joke for the RELIANCE on just the technology and not teaching things like Celestial Navigation whether it's to a bomber Navigator or Sailors on Ships. Technology is a great thing, but it can 'Dumb people down' some. A perfect example is telephone numbers. You used to pickup the handset and you just automatically dialed the number of whoever you were thinking about calling. Now, most people, couldn't call anyone if their cellphone was broken or lost. I think that the Technology is great. I just appreciate the teaching and learning of the skills that work when the technology doesn't. Think EMP here! Ya'll Take Care and be safe, John
@purplefood1
@purplefood1 Год назад
@@JohnDoe-pv2iu I mean that's patently untrue, people had personal phonebooks and general phonebooks for looking up numbers if they weren't one of the handful they could recall off the top of their head, literally no one remembered every number for everyone they ended up calling. Also it's a terrible example because it's not like people can't remember things anymore there's just very little reason to try and remember every phone number when they're stored and retrieved so easily. Navigation by stars or calling in artillery is an actual learned skill that you need to teach and I do agree it's worthwhile teaching those skills but they are taught skills not knowing them doesn't make you dumber it makes you untrained. Acting like computers are dumbing people down is ignoring how people are actually working with computers, if you want to be safe in the case of an EMP (for some reason) then teach the older skills as well but let's not pretend they're even remotely as good as what we have these days.
@Spootythefoozler
@Spootythefoozler Год назад
In 2016, when I was part of Operation Atlantic Resolve, we were part of an exercise in Poland (I was in the 10th BEB from Raider [1st Brigade, from the 3In Division based out of Fort Stewart in the US]) and I remember one day when we were setting up in the massive dome type tents near the training site, and we were bringing in the six pack liter bottles of water, and I was super tired and delirious. We had been awake for at least three days basically on our convoy from Graf in Germany to the training site in Poland. The officers were helping because it was all hands on deck and we needed to hurry up and get settled in so we could prepare for the training exercise. I started laughing, and the company commander CPT Berreth looks over at me and says " What's funny, Wirth?" We had a pretty close relationship as I was his gunner at the time and I had been his driver before. I said, "Sir it's not funny, I promise." And he insists that I say what's funny. So I held the six pack of liter bottles of water over my head and said, " Look Sir, I'm a HIMARS!" I then proceeded to pretend to fire rockets over my head with exceptional sound effects. Needless to say, he and the other officers looked at me, shaking their heads in disbelief, and i was deeply embarassed. 10/10 would do it again
@Guntank214
@Guntank214 Год назад
Did 7 years in a HIMARS unit including one deployment to Afghanistan in support of a JSOC task force. We didn't shoot a lot. But when we did all of Bagram Airfield payed attention. Got to the point that whenever we were at the firing point, which you could see from the end of the flight line, a bunch of Airman would sit on their side of the fence for awhile to wait and see if we were going to shoot.
@johnsilver9338
@johnsilver9338 Год назад
SPH range is also increasing. XM1299 SPH that are to replace the M109s has already hit a target 72 km away using XM1113 RAP rounds in a demonstration. It may even hit further at 100km+ using XM1155 ramjet rocket rounds.
@stinopharan5528
@stinopharan5528 Год назад
ERCA w/ excalibur will be 100km.+
@johnsilver9338
@johnsilver9338 Год назад
@@stinopharan5528 They've also tried Excalibur but it can only go as far as 65km which is not bad as its not a RAP round. The closest SPH to have hit a similar range is South African G6-52 and German PzH 2000 at 67km using special RAP rounds.
@SodziausPilietis
@SodziausPilietis Год назад
Yesterday i was looking a video of himars in your channel, but couldnt find one, and now. Boom ! ty man.
@thomasromanelli2561
@thomasromanelli2561 Год назад
I found the short clip of a HIMARS truck chained to the deck of a USN warship interesting, and a proof-of-concept for extended-range ordinance that can be deployed in a contested area like the South China Sea. I would think the DoD is already looking into non-traditional platforms that can carry HIMARS to offset some of the established advantage the PLAN has created with its AAAD approach within the first island chain, reflecting the doctrinal shift back to supporting amphibious operations in hostile environments where air/naval supremacy by US assets may not be assured.
@tylerclayton6081
@tylerclayton6081 Год назад
The US navy doesn’t even have to operate within the first island chain. There can be 6 or 7 super carriers along with a few light carriers launching air craft to destroy China’s navy airforce and the Chinese fleet. They would be supported by land based aircraft launching from Japan and Guam. The US has far more 5th generation jets than China and far more 4th generation jets as well. It wouldn’t be too difficult to destroy their airforce and air defense SAMs
@jordanulery524
@jordanulery524 Год назад
Using rockets on ships is not new to the USN. Recall the rocket LSTs of WW2. Considered, if you will (sorry, my inner Rod Sterling coming out), a “sort of stealthy” littoral combat ship (either class) speeding within range, losing a guided salvo, getting the hell away. Hard hit, hard to see coming, hard to see running away. Will it happen?
@thomasromanelli2561
@thomasromanelli2561 Год назад
@@tylerclayton6081 You're presenting a very optimistic scenario that seems disturbingly out of touch with current force projection estimates regarding the strength and depth of the PLAN AAAD system already in place, and which is supported by a maritime combined arms force of relatively new, modern cruisers (even though the the Chinese refer to the Type 55 as a 'destroyer'), destroyers and submarines operating close to their home logistical bases. The PLAN supports a fairly large "grey navy" of fishing boats which can probably be equipped in short order with box-type launchers to saturate the USN air defense capabilities of the 2-3 carrier strike groups that can be committed immediately, and the other 3-4 that may take as long as 3 weeks to arrive on station. You're also assuming that China doesn't incapacitate Guam, Diego Garcia and Yokosuka, which will be the bases supporting US and allied operations. Long-range PGMs are essential elements in a response to potential Chinese aggression, and we need significant numbers that can be deployed on diversified platforms.
@thomasromanelli2561
@thomasromanelli2561 Год назад
@@jordanulery524 I think you're on to something there! 😉
@knmo2642
@knmo2642 Год назад
Just get a freight ship and strap a few HIMARS on it lol
@Greg29
@Greg29 Год назад
Was waiting for this one 👍
@ph11p3540
@ph11p3540 Год назад
Amazon will sell these for $5 million includes 6 free rockets. If you are on Amazon Prime we will deliver this the same day by our own fleet of C-130 delivery planes
@redneckster6639
@redneckster6639 Год назад
Look up in the dark net, ukranazis resell those for far cheaper.
@zeberek1987
@zeberek1987 Год назад
@@redneckster6639 russian trolls :-)
@colingoldthorpe5918
@colingoldthorpe5918 Год назад
I remember sat waiting at the start line for the 1st UK armoured division assault during OP Granby (Desert Storm)watching the MLRS and artillery bombardment, along with the Aerial bombardment Thinking to myself thank the lord I’m on this side. But for sustained long term artillery support the howitzers are hard to beat. For dash and bash runs these are the cats ass for sure. These and along with the fire and forget anti tank missile systems have been a game changer for the current war in Ukraine 🇺🇦.
@jarink1
@jarink1 Год назад
I was just a few klicks away - 1st ID vet here. They sure were impressive to watch launching, especially at night.
@pratyushojha
@pratyushojha Год назад
I was a child watching on TV. It's one of the few things that I remember from the war. The other being a battleship firing. 😀
@colingoldthorpe5918
@colingoldthorpe5918 Год назад
@@pratyushojha Pretty cool to see them in person I had my 21st birthday crossing into Iraq. Some party LOL !!!!!
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
I too was a kid, my dad was the XO of an American wild weasel squadron in Germany at the time. Our fighters were some of the very first non F-117’s into enemy territory. In fact, I believe they were not even allowed to engage enemy aircraft BVR until a specific time to ensure that they didn’t accidentally target a Nighthawk returning from Baghdad.
@ifax1245
@ifax1245 Год назад
I think HIMARS used with M1299 Extended Range Cannon Artillery "ERCA" is the balance needed on the battlefield. ERCA rounds are cheaper to produce compared to HIMARS.
@richardcoppin5332
@richardcoppin5332 Год назад
As a spectator, it would seem that the HIMARS has a particular use case. Small precise, long range artillery, shoot and scoot. It seems complementary to a battery of howitzers who can lay down persistent fire across a wide area, albeit at a closer range. It wish would seem that 2 HIMARS systems are far more versatile and resilient than one M270 MLRS.
@ecossearthur
@ecossearthur Год назад
Great Information as always!
@Duvstep910
@Duvstep910 Год назад
Beautiful piece of kit
@80-80.
@80-80. Год назад
Awesome weapon. It perfectly exploits Russia's weakness it seems.
@slowburn7765
@slowburn7765 Год назад
I guess you never heard of the tornado-s
@bracovalencic
@bracovalencic Год назад
Great video
@matt9897
@matt9897 Год назад
I would like to add a note regarding why HIMARS is better than M270, mobility wise. To put it simply, it requires less ass. Lighter, more fuel efficient, highly mobile on and off road, helicopter slingable, C130 packable button punching badassery. But seriously, ever seen tracks operate too independently of wheeled supply? Me neither.
@sc1338
@sc1338 Год назад
Probably quieter as well
@alfaeco15
@alfaeco15 Год назад
Now develop a version that can fire while still moving. With same precision.
@jannegrey593
@jannegrey593 Год назад
@@alfaeco15 Doable - at least for approx. constant speed movement in straight line. After all they've already proven it on a ship. And yes, the ship was moving - that was the idea. Took couple of software upgrades. Question is rather whether such software wouldn't be too big, if you also have to have extensive map database etc. Given that apart from "1GB capacity" we don't know what is the capacity of HIMARS system. Computationally also harder, so just like with capacity upgrade might be required, but it isn't that much harder, given that a lot of the burden would still be on missile itself. Question is how often do they update their position and how long does it take to update it. If it is more than couple of seconds, then it might be too much for the missile to correct - perhaps slower barrage?
@casbot71
@casbot71 Год назад
You're not a military RU-vidr _these days_ if you don't have a HIMARS video or two.
@pteppig
@pteppig Год назад
Or a nice thermobaric MLRS "grid square remover"
@johnniewalker8410
@johnniewalker8410 Год назад
True still good content
@dnate697
@dnate697 Год назад
Great!
@jurzyjohner432
@jurzyjohner432 Год назад
That warrior intro is so cool dude, i mean you have to extended somehow or even make a mini dark movie about him.
@richardhasler6718
@richardhasler6718 Год назад
Thanks for this, I can see this as a very effective weapon. It can be carried on a C 130, can be deployed within minutes of landing, can fire and move within minutes, requires less skill to operate and would be ideally linked to drone surveillance of the target, which can be apparently hit with a very accurate missile. It can then drive 100km to the next location and be ready again. The only issue I can see is the cost of each missile.
@neiljasonvillanueva1864
@neiljasonvillanueva1864 Год назад
One video said 200thousand for each missile. Way cheaper than a warehouse of arty munitions or a battery of howitzers about to explode
@kirkthiets2771
@kirkthiets2771 Год назад
I bet they have sleds and parachutes for them too.
@robertroberts5090
@robertroberts5090 Год назад
Great Video
@MichalProzac
@MichalProzac Год назад
I know you cannot cover the war Matt but just knowing the weapon systems present gives a very very good understanding into what is going on.
@JoeyC777
@JoeyC777 Год назад
Why can't he cover the war? Because he's serving in the army?
@MichalProzac
@MichalProzac Год назад
@@JoeyC777 Yes because he is an active member of the armed forces and it is against rules. If he was not in the military he would probably have a gold mine covering the war (and would be my number one go to source of information), but he is a good man with principles first and that is worth a ton of respect in my view.
@JoeyC777
@JoeyC777 Год назад
@@MichalProzac Thanks. Wasn't aware of that rule.
@MichalProzac
@MichalProzac Год назад
@@JoeyC777 Yeah Matt mentioned it a few times maybe he will notice and give you a better explanation than I ever could.
@gossebijlenga9075
@gossebijlenga9075 Год назад
Bedankt
@zbyszanna
@zbyszanna Год назад
I once found a picture of MLRS inside the Turbo bubble gum. They usually put photos of super cool cars like Lambo or Vector but that one time, it was MLRS and it looked like the future was already here.
@zemog1025
@zemog1025 Год назад
One wonders what MLRS effectiveness would be like if the US retained the submunition versions of the rockets.
@Shaun_Jones
@Shaun_Jones Год назад
They were retired because they had an unacceptable dud rate, and there isn’t really a fix to guarantee that the tens of thousands of submunitions have perfect reliability.
@ME262MKI
@ME262MKI Год назад
That's the difference between eastern warfare and western warfare, Easter relay on numbers and volume of fire power, like 30, 60 years ago, the west relay on precision, range, pin point accuracy and speed, HIMARS is good example, HIMARS doesn't need a 12+ missile launcher when it can use high precision missiles that can hit further than any eastern MLRS of similar characteristics
@zhufortheimpaler4041
@zhufortheimpaler4041 Год назад
yeah the major difference is, that the west uses smaller more "elite" forces, expecting to get away with it, while former eastern block nations know, that once shit hits the fan, people start to die and equipment gets destroyed. During the cold war, sovjet MBT were in most aspects similarly capable or surperior to western MBT with exception to the optronics, wich were slightly, but only slightly, worse. The sovjets pitted about 7-10 MBT against each NATO MBT. Guess who would have won WW3 in 1980. It would not have been NATO.
@ME262MKI
@ME262MKI Год назад
@@zhufortheimpaler4041 in a conflict, ground forces don't mean shit when you don't have air superiority, like we see right now with Russia in Ukraine and NATO always stand out for that doctrine, it's doesn't matter how many tanks or SPG you can have if the enemy knows where ar you ging and what are you gonna do your numbers worth little more.
@zhufortheimpaler4041
@zhufortheimpaler4041 Год назад
@@ME262MKI well, what's the other thing, Russia today is really big in besides artillery? And the sovjet union back then too. Multi layered air defense. Sovjet union has back in the day, just like Russia today, one if not the strongest air defense capability of the world. You can't really use your air power VS that
@shimakazef.7809
@shimakazef.7809 Год назад
@@zhufortheimpaler4041 how can you shoot what you cannot see? the US has the best electronic warfare craft in the world, and the ability to hit air defense before it can even react. HARM's, JSOW's, and a plethora of other items meant to deal specifically with this supposedly superior air defense.
@zhufortheimpaler4041
@zhufortheimpaler4041 Год назад
@@shimakazef.7809 dude for every air defense system nato brings to the field, russia brings 50. and those are not shitty 50´s systems but pretty modern systems too. During the cold war, NATO would have faced a no fly zone over central europe, so air surperiority would have been gone. stealth aircraft like F-22 are a thing of the 90´s. Until then you would have faced russian air defense with standart non stealth jets. Even today, Russias air defense capabilities are more or less the strongest of the world and they can deny air acess to the eastern baltic sea and parts of europe, even to the US. Every anti air emplacement operation (wild weasel) would suffer massive casualties. guess how long the US or NATO can keep wild weasel missions running, when they loose 1/3 of aircraft each mission? Thats why the great emphasis on artillery was made during the cold war by both sides. You cant expect to have air surperiority or even limited air support and your ground forces will face an equal or surperior enemy on the ground. the solution: massed artillery. tube and rocket. btw do you really think, that russia and china do not have EWAR systems and do not have them en masse? How will you engage enemy radar positions, if you get permanently jammed and engaged with very long range AA missiles that are capable of engaging Targets 400km away?
@apuuvah
@apuuvah Год назад
Shoot 'n Scoot. Shock 'n Awe. Speed, surprise, violence of action.
@Chuck_Hooks
@Chuck_Hooks Год назад
Poland wants 500 HIMARS launchers.
@nobodyherepal3292
@nobodyherepal3292 Год назад
The Arsenal of democracy is at your service.
@greeker10
@greeker10 Год назад
I doubt the whole USA has 500 systems
@rightiswrongrightiswrong806
@@greeker10 Just over a hundred were built for export.
@Chuck_Hooks
@Chuck_Hooks Год назад
@@greeker10 Poland wants to buy 500 NEW HIMARS launchers.
@zeberek1987
@zeberek1987 Год назад
@@rightiswrongrightiswrong806 nope, us have more then 400 in service
@mjk9388
@mjk9388 Год назад
Would there be any advantages to an extended range loitering munition out of a HIMARS system?
@342Rodry
@342Rodry Год назад
awesome
@michaeldenesyk3195
@michaeldenesyk3195 Год назад
HIMARS is now, I wonder what is waiting around the corner for the next generation of long-range rocket artillery. While watching this video I was thinking if HIMARS doctrine is attacking the enemy beyond the forward edge of the front line, or does it really have the capability to be used in close support of troops in contact.
@jerrymclamb82
@jerrymclamb82 Год назад
ukraine could use a longer range precision missle now, to take out that bridge that connects crimea and russia. the russians are sending a lot of munitions across that bridge, and if taken out it would HELP UKRAINE IMMENSELY, maybe even getting russia to leave even sooner!
@cattledog901
@cattledog901 Год назад
HIMARS to Matsimus: "The future is now old man".
@TheCerebralDude
@TheCerebralDude Год назад
Historically artillery is still the biggest killer of infantry on the battlefield
@OpeoAslam
@OpeoAslam Год назад
Long range ballistics!
@crazyeyez1502
@crazyeyez1502 Год назад
I was on Kandahar air field in 2010 when they fired these off. It was intense. None of us normal folk knew what was really going on. Just hearing those rockets screaming by.
@CREATE-ex6ky
@CREATE-ex6ky Год назад
I love Himars
@HarleyMikeJrSWA737
@HarleyMikeJrSWA737 2 месяца назад
Best job I ever had
@davidlefranc6240
@davidlefranc6240 Год назад
Nice video you should give us a video about the AScalon future main battle tank gun .
@Lofwyrf
@Lofwyrf Год назад
@Matsimus, do you have videos on different Artillery Amunitions?
@livingood1049
@livingood1049 Год назад
I want one!!
@assertivekarma1909
@assertivekarma1909 Год назад
The comment about crew morale is interesting, if a platform is more enjoyable to use & creates a good team atmosphere that is a subtle value to consider from the top desks... but, survivability & effectiveness are even better for overall morale & ultimate objectives...
@TankMarion
@TankMarion Год назад
Next thing you know, soldiers will be playing REDCON irl lol And speaking of the future, regarding the guided systems and what not, it also reminds me of another game, Warzone 2100, it had an extensive focus on Radar/Fire support/Counter-battery. It worked pretty simply afaik, just link said fire support to a radar (stationary or mobile) and keep them in range and you got artillery dominating the battlefield that easy! Though from what I could remember of my limited time playing it was a real pain trying to get Radar/Artillery up if your enemy already has established Sensors n Howitzers.
@madmaniac9483
@madmaniac9483 Год назад
Imagine if they had one of these next to a bunch of regular artillery and someone had the bright idea of seeing if the rockets work in the regular artillery? Also watching this video with subtitles had the name come out as 'high Mars'
@petrsukenik9266
@petrsukenik9266 Год назад
i love rocket aletilery and HIMARS is best one
@SanBrunoBeacon
@SanBrunoBeacon Год назад
Timely.
@basedaf5580
@basedaf5580 Год назад
hey Matsimus been following your channel for a bunch of years l, I'm trying to get into the CAF and wondering if you could do a video on CAF drill instruction, thanks!!
@petesheppard1709
@petesheppard1709 Год назад
And there's still a place for the original cluster warhead. Because of its long range and precision, a few HIMARS were able to cover territory in Afghanistan that would have required numerous tube arty fire bases.
@Marvin-dg8vj
@Marvin-dg8vj Год назад
except it wasn't a conventional war so it could not be won by an army. the problem was political
@petesheppard1709
@petesheppard1709 Год назад
@@Marvin-dg8vj True, but the troops appreciated the fire support.
@williamzk9083
@williamzk9083 Год назад
Cluser ammunition has mostly been baned by the Oslo treaty.
@petesheppard1709
@petesheppard1709 Год назад
@@williamzk9083 But it would still be seriously useful.
@pavlothekozak827
@pavlothekozak827 Год назад
I've been inspecting them for shipment to Ukraine from a military base in the PNW.
@lineinthesand663
@lineinthesand663 Год назад
Can counter-battery radars detect the ionised exhaust plumes of the rockets, or just the missile frames?
@zeberek1987
@zeberek1987 Год назад
Radars probably just frame, but there are orher systems with detect launch of misiles. For sure such are in satelites and new fighers
@zhufortheimpaler4041
@zhufortheimpaler4041 Год назад
@@zeberek1987 Weather radar picks up clouds, so yeah, counter battery radar with high resolution will be able to pick up the exhaust plume
@zeberek1987
@zeberek1987 Год назад
@@zhufortheimpaler4041 this is very weak comparisions clouds are big, many kilometers wide. There are better ways to find rocket
@williamzk9083
@williamzk9083 Год назад
If it has a range of over 50km or 70km it may have burned out before it gets above the radar horizon. If it is GPS guided it can fly a non ballistic shaped path to confound back tracking radar. In any case the HIMARS could relocate before the missiles even hit the ground and counter battery fire has commenced.
@zhufortheimpaler4041
@zhufortheimpaler4041 Год назад
@@williamzk9083 dude, counter battery radar is ground scanning radar. there is next to no radar horizon today. ground surveilance radar is used to pick up ground targets for artillery, air strikes, long range missile strikes etc
@--Dani
@--Dani Год назад
As awsome as the MLRS is especially where it is in such need today,🇺🇦, the good old boom sticks will still be king of the battle field, probably see even longer range artillery in the future, it augments the howitzers great, but grunt is always going to need to be able to call in fire at moment notice for economical price with devastating effects. My 2 cents...cheers👍
@Dread_Pirate_Homesteader
@Dread_Pirate_Homesteader Год назад
Yawn Ukraine sucks
@rael5469
@rael5469 Год назад
Wow.....with the NVG you can see that sometimes the rocket ignites slowly and then goes off. Sometimes it's a slow burn. I bet they don't really want that.
@nick4819
@nick4819 Год назад
No, you are seeing the left over stuff burning from the launch of the missile. That isn't a slow burning fuel and then fully igniting.
@echomande4395
@echomande4395 Год назад
I would not be terribly surprised if the next generation of upgrades for artillery will include drones. It should be quite possible for individual firing vehicles, or towed guns, to have their own drones so that if need be they can do their own forward observing for quicker response instead of depending on information coming down the chain of command.
@Bob_Betker
@Bob_Betker Год назад
Not really necessary, there is so much data coming from drones, sensors and other sources that you need a centralized capacity to filter and prioritize everything.
@adrianotaylor7230
@adrianotaylor7230 Год назад
You should do a Video on the Tornado S
@jonathanwebb8307
@jonathanwebb8307 Год назад
HIMARS is a fantastic system, we need it in the UK
@ultimaratio7373
@ultimaratio7373 Год назад
For long range, precision strikes, HIMARS arguably has no equivalent. However, it is relatively high cost when compared to conventional artillery i.e. One HIMARS missile= 150,000 usd, one 155 mm shell=400 usd.
@williamzk9083
@williamzk9083 Год назад
I think a conventional artillery shell must be more like $4000/round. GPS guided munitions fired from a top end long range Self Propelled Howitzer such as the PzH 2000 must be equally powerful. A PzH 2000 can time and adjust firing angles. to enure that 6 155mm shells hit at the same time.
@ultimaratio7373
@ultimaratio7373 Год назад
@@williamzk9083 I stand corrected, still a considerable difference, not as readily available as conventional artillery shells and therefore used for different purposes i.e long range, high-value targets
@andrewsmall6834
@andrewsmall6834 Год назад
Australia will be getting these for artillery as well as anti ship roles.
@mmeade9402
@mmeade9402 Год назад
The forward operating base and field guns being setup is fine... as long as you're fighting insurgents or lower tier forces. But against a near peer adversary yes, emplaced field guns are in need of going the way of the dodo.
@soonerfrac4611
@soonerfrac4611 Год назад
I really like the new Hawkeye system for the 105, and a slightly larger version for the 155.
@Bob_Betker
@Bob_Betker Год назад
But not every military is fighting a high intensity conflict. Even then, it is really difficult to provide sustained fire support using rocket artillery; as others have said once you fire your pod, you have to move, drop off your old pod/reload a new one and relocate to the next firing position; there is a break in firing. There will be a mix of rocket and tube artillery, and some of that tube artillery will be towed and some will be SP's; they complement each other.
@mmeade9402
@mmeade9402 Год назад
@@Bob_Betker I dont have any issue with tube artillery, but towed artillery I think may be nearing the end of its service life when it comes to any sort of high intensity near peer conflict. Its just not survivable enough when fighting an enemy that has persistent surveillance and counter battery radars. Like Sooner said, the Hawkeye 105mm sp system looks good, and I dont know the price but if it can be had for ~near~ the same price as a regular M119 then thats def the way to go. Same for the 155mm/M777, skip the expensive/finicky autoloader system, mount the gun on some sort of heavy duty wheeled platform with a recoil reducing system like the Hawkeye and install an auto laying system so you can get in complete your fire mission and get out quick. Sort of like the CAESAR. Keep the price down so you can acquire enough to outfit nearly the entire force. CAESAR looks good, but Ive heard they're nearly as expensive as full tracked self propelled gun. Same for Archer...
@matso3856
@matso3856 Год назад
@@mmeade9402 Well at least with the archer crew doesnt have to poke out , and it can be operated with only 1 crew if need be. Reload is done by another vehicle & crew so it would be sustainable. All these nice features drives up the cost , but I rather have mobile arty then anything that drones can drop DIY hand grenades on and take out the entire crew.
@georgesmith8113
@georgesmith8113 Год назад
👍👍👍👊
@DforDenmark
@DforDenmark Год назад
Oh HIMARS
@steffenb.jrgensen2014
@steffenb.jrgensen2014 Год назад
HIMARS first of all is effective due to its extremely accurate GPS guided rockets. That gives a single rocket an effect comparable to several salvoes from an entire traditional artillery bataljon - if not much more when it comes to actually destroying the target and not just keeping it down - at at 2-3 times the range of traditional artillery! That also gives a huge logistic advantage as you can achieve a given amount of firepower with just a fraction of the supplies and manpower. A single very mobile launcher vehicle is also much less vulnerable than big traditional artillery units. In that context even the 16 vehicles in Ukranian service so far represent a tremendous firepower and if they achieve the 50 systems whished for (should be possible) the Russian army will be in big trouble. Anything they deploy west of the Dniepr river risk being cut off and crushed.
@robinross6701
@robinross6701 Год назад
HIMARS?? Are you referring to the "Orc slayer 5000"??
@welchphilip
@welchphilip Год назад
Another big thing they have against counter fire is they can take a flight path to specifically evade counter tracking, rockets go out then up. This has been observed in Ukraine
@guyb7995
@guyb7995 Год назад
I wonder if there is a randomisation to that dogleg to prevent counter battery from being programmed to account for it in the future.
@nathanzylla4961
@nathanzylla4961 Год назад
With all the new orders in it might turn into the f-16 of rocket arty...mass production and long build time..maybe cheap in the long run
@SNOWDONTRYFAN
@SNOWDONTRYFAN Год назад
The US has announced a new tranche of weapons for Ukraine’s forces, including ammunition for increasingly important rocket launchers and artillery guns. The new $550m package will “include more ammunition for the high mobility advanced rocket systems
@SNOWDONTRYFAN
@SNOWDONTRYFAN Год назад
@@Biden_is_demented The Germans have recently sent x3 but like all proxy wars the true numbers of weapons flowing into ones country are never known , most of the announcements are phycological in nature , as for game changers , one needs to look at its capability as an individual surgical strike weapon, or operating in a battery, highly manoeuvrable and extremely hard to counter fire against , the Russians do not posses anything as good, more so its mix of rocket ammunition , the aim now for the UDF is to hit the rear echelon area of Russian forces, disrupting their logistical bases and command and control , all in reach of the highly accurate HMARS .As for your presence part, one needs to understand that this proxy war is different , it is highly advanced and Ukraine has a blank cheque book guaranteed by the west and others , Putin got away with Crimea, he will not be allowed to get away with this unprovoked and unwarranted attack on another sovereign country and for sure will pay a heavy price for it , and as most credible countries have stated, must never be allowed to continue with his bad acting in the region ever again ! which means folks are done with him !
@kluftstraatman392
@kluftstraatman392 Год назад
"DEPOT SPOTTED! HIMARS GO!!!"
@MrSheduur
@MrSheduur Год назад
They will be effective as long as there is no proper mechanism to intercept the missles. With its high demand for it now, you can be sure that militaries around the world will be spinning to find ways to counter these systems effectively. If it can be done, regular artillery will reign once again, since you cannot really intercept the projectiles from that.
@KingSpittusFactus
@KingSpittusFactus Год назад
yes you can
@whya2ndaccount
@whya2ndaccount Год назад
A bit of Talisman Sabre 21 footage there.
@bingoberra18
@bingoberra18 Год назад
What is the cost of a salvo of 6 rockets? Be it unguided and/or GPS guided
@liuyifei1989
@liuyifei1989 Год назад
About a million.
@linhlopbaya
@linhlopbaya Год назад
150k$ gps guided rocket, so a salvo of 6 costs 1mil$. However, the high cost is due to very low production volume of the rockets and the design is pretty "new", electronics components inside it is very expensive with such a low volume. I have read somewhere that even US stockpile only has bought total appx 50000 rounds since 2010s, and US has only used 1/3 of that number in about 15 years. Now with the thing in Ukraine, suddenly "real war" is possible everywhere, nations start buying both the HIMARS/MLRS and the guided rocket ammunition, cost should reduce quickly with such high demand.
@evanandrews2835
@evanandrews2835 Год назад
What kind of gun are you on?
@fredsmith2277
@fredsmith2277 Год назад
computers are excellent marksmen, they are crack shots that rarely miss if conditions allow !!!
@ericstefko4852
@ericstefko4852 Год назад
Canada needs some of these
@dominicdaley5702
@dominicdaley5702 Год назад
Why!?
@ericstefko4852
@ericstefko4852 Год назад
@@dominicdaley5702 because it has proven itself as a effective standoff weapon
@kubluu
@kubluu Год назад
I was hoping to see some clips of the rockets landing...
@_Matsimus_
@_Matsimus_ Год назад
Go watch some Ukraine footage. It’s there. Most people don’t like seeing people blow up. And footage of it landing in training is rare.
@topshelfmusicgroup5899
@topshelfmusicgroup5899 Год назад
Allows for a gigabyte of data 😂 Was built in the early 2000s alright. Considering firing solutions take up basically no storage though, I’m sure it doesn’t make any practical difference. Really an amazing feat of engineering all around
@Jarandjar
@Jarandjar Год назад
Has a gigabyte of storage? Or has gigabyte transfer speeds?
@topshelfmusicgroup5899
@topshelfmusicgroup5899 Год назад
@@Jarandjar considering the time frame when they were designed, 1 gigabyte of storage seems more likely. I’m sure the military has tons of gigabit connections as well, but I’m not sure if it would necessarily be needed here. Considering they’re often in areas without high speed infrastructure, without a wired connection I assume it’s not that fast most of the time but I’m honestly not 100% sure there
@Jarandjar
@Jarandjar Год назад
@@topshelfmusicgroup5899 Pretty sure the Air Force has their own network, I don't think any military ever uses civilian infrastructure.
@johanj3674
@johanj3674 Год назад
Video suggestion: with the success of HIMARS regarding precision, meaning less of a burden on logistics, how will it evolve? Is it for every country? It's expensive which will discourage some armies. Is it modular so that the launcher and cockpit could be put on another brand without that much extra cost? Germany might prefer Mercedes,m Sweden Volvo, Italy Iveco etc.
@pteppig
@pteppig Год назад
It's extremely expensive and very slow to reload, requiring more support vehicles than the new wheeled NLOS artillery systems that several countries develop. Russias 2C351, FLOX and malva artillery are already being fielded in Ukraine - several dozen, compared to the 4 himars they have left
@taylan3363
@taylan3363 Год назад
@@pteppig 4 HIMARS? Ukraine has 16 of them now with a recent addition of 4 more. There is no evidence that a single HIMARS system has been destroyed.
@zeberek1987
@zeberek1987 Год назад
@@pteppig malva is mortal systemi dont know if they even start production. Floks is for sure not even produced yet they want start production on late of 2022
@bluebox87059
@bluebox87059 Год назад
@@pteppig It takes less than 10 minutes to reload the HIMARS system. And each GMLRS comes in at around $160k, not a bad cost when you consider each one of these missiles can be guided in on independent targets with extreme precision.
@johanj3674
@johanj3674 Год назад
@@pteppig So Flox is a mortar and Malva just a wheeled Pion? They're nowhere near the capability of HIMARS. Also HIMARS are the launcher vehicle and then a reload transporter. You know, like every fucking artillery system ever.
@poil8351
@poil8351 Год назад
also tom many computers can be a problem if they have a virus or emp is used then they are in the dark i wonder if it has manual launch function or if it is all computerised.
@KingSpittusFactus
@KingSpittusFactus Год назад
EMP would not be tactically used since it also fries the enemies stuff
@Darkess343
@Darkess343 Год назад
I wonder if they would ever try to make a HIMARS out of a Amk27 or 28 MTVR?
@ianryan9513
@ianryan9513 Год назад
How accurate are the unguided rockets?
@DaveWhoa
@DaveWhoa Год назад
al-Zawahiri confirms America has very accurate PRECISION munitions
@cvdheyden
@cvdheyden Год назад
Is there a rocketmodule planned for the Boxer?
@sobesmith5415
@sobesmith5415 Год назад
Can/does the crew stay in the cab when it fires?
@jozsefdornyei
@jozsefdornyei Год назад
Wheeled artillery is better as tracked artillery if ground conditions allows the usage of it. Ideally the army has both of them and more wheeled as tracked as most of the time ground conditions are ok. MLRS has better firepower as regular artillery. The problem with it is the cost of ammunition. One MLRS rocket costs $150-200K. One artillery shell costs less then $1K. Manufacturing capability is less then 10K/year. That is less then 1 day worth of artillery shells usage in a real war. MLRS is good but I would focus on getting instead regular towed artillery in high numbers, wheeled artillery in medium numbers, tracked artillery in low numbers and wheeled MLRS in low numbers.
@jean-marccote9829
@jean-marccote9829 Год назад
also called the 60 km sniper
@Schaddedanzer
@Schaddedanzer Год назад
13:24 "Poland and Estonia... more than 500" around 77% of the amount of K9, Poland planes to buy too. Indicates an replacing of the old BM-21 systems with them, which would open up the budged nightmare they try to end with K2 tanks, straight again. The Ammo is much to expensive for a tactical use similar to the BM-21and his simple, cheap rockt-propelled-grenades in a longer running war. Exactly the trap which the (aircraft strategy based) USA tried/used in arms race with the (missile strategy based) UDSSR during the cold war.
@wyyrdojim
@wyyrdojim Год назад
What is the ring antenna on both vehicles?🤔
@jeffslaven
@jeffslaven Год назад
The HIMARS is certainly the future of artillery, but I doubt that it's the death knell of traditional artillery just yet. The Howitzer still very much has it's place, and will continue to do so for quite a while I think.
@Tonius126
@Tonius126 Год назад
Small Drones is the death of traditional stationary artillery. It's imparative to now switch to wheeled and tracked.
@guyb7995
@guyb7995 Год назад
​@@Tonius126 Very soon you are going to see a stark increase in anti-drone weapons appear. This war will have made that a very high priority of many arms manufacturers.
@williamzk9083
@williamzk9083 Год назад
The PzH 2000 can fire GPS guided shells. By timing the shots and the angle of fire the PzH can land 6 rounds at exactly the same time. Pretty much as powerful as HIMARS with almost the same range with extended range ammunition.
@guyb7995
@guyb7995 Год назад
@@williamzk9083 It's only half the max range with base bleed rounds, and still over 30km shorter range with its RAP round, and that MAX range is only achievable through a single ballistic arc so it can not do its multiple simultaneous impact at that range, it's physically impossible. Those are massive differences on the front lines. Its the difference of being within range of counter battery or not. Being a pure ballistic round, it is also much much more vulnerable to that counter batter. Its also tracked so much higher maintenance and also slower to get around. It definitely has its place and is top of its class, but it don't bat near the HIMARS for the roll it is playing.
@Ph33NIXx
@Ph33NIXx Год назад
Did you serve with the Danes in Musa Qala?
@ShanGamer1981
@ShanGamer1981 Год назад
Is it a good daily commuter?
@_Matsimus_
@_Matsimus_ Год назад
Lmao nah but it has a mean 24 disc changer in the back!
@rocklouis2904
@rocklouis2904 Год назад
I swear iu want one just to say i have one. roll up at the club, at the BBQ, to a house party. No one would mess with me cause you know i can bring the smoke.
@brdd514
@brdd514 Год назад
Request: HI-RAIN missions
@MK-xc9to
@MK-xc9to Год назад
Well , i guess the USA delivered HIMARS instead of more M270 MLRS because its lighter and fits in a Plane and can be delivered that way fast to Ukraine . The difference between 56 kmh of the tracked MLRS and the 94 kmh of the HIMARS is not so big , they are both mobile . The MLRS has the advantage of 12 Rockets instead of 6 = it can cause doubble the Damage and run away before the rockets impact . The German Mars 2 , which is a Version of the M270 MLRS , can launch every 5,5 sec a rocket = 12 Rockets in 66s if its the same Target , lets say a Bridge . The German Version can drive up to 65 kmh , normally 56 kmh , the same speed as a Gepard ( Anti Air Tank , 65 kmh ) or the Leopard 2 which is slightly faster ( 68 -72 kmh )
@spinmaster4348
@spinmaster4348 Год назад
It would be quite a feat for the HIMARS to launch a Patriot though.🤔
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