Operator from the 38th Marine Brigade hit the Supercam surveillance drone in the Kherson region using modernized FPV drones from the Come Back Alive Foundation. Published on September 4, 2024
Operator from the 38th Marine Brigade hit the Supercam surveillance drone in the Kherson region using modernized FPV drones from the Come Back Alive Foundation. Published on September 4, 2024
I have to admit that the Supercam is a beautiful and capable drone, but since it is on the wrong side of history it will have to continue to be destroyed by fundraising drones
Get them marines
relative_motion on
Wow these quadcopter drones are flying much higher than normal. The view is much clearer as well. Combined with this top down attack method seen the other day, I think they have some new tech and strategy here.
I really wonder what kinda system they have for locating those drones. They are very high up and he seems to be flying straight at it without the camera even being able to see it when he starts. Do they have some kinda of location tracking in the software that gives them a heading and pitch to hold?
Shadowmind42 on
I wonder how they find the Russian drones to attack them. I’ve flown drones many times and lose them in the sky all the time. That is at 400 feet and no more than 0.5 miles.
ActionPlanetRobot on
Looking forward to the Queen Hornet drone taking these out with its gun instead of having to ram the drone into it
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I have to admit that the Supercam is a beautiful and capable drone, but since it is on the wrong side of history it will have to continue to be destroyed by fundraising drones
Get them marines
Wow these quadcopter drones are flying much higher than normal. The view is much clearer as well. Combined with this top down attack method seen the other day, I think they have some new tech and strategy here.
Cue [Leo Moracchioli](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxJHvdLyUHU)?
I really wonder what kinda system they have for locating those drones. They are very high up and he seems to be flying straight at it without the camera even being able to see it when he starts. Do they have some kinda of location tracking in the software that gives them a heading and pitch to hold?
I wonder how they find the Russian drones to attack them. I’ve flown drones many times and lose them in the sky all the time. That is at 400 feet and no more than 0.5 miles.
Looking forward to the Queen Hornet drone taking these out with its gun instead of having to ram the drone into it