payload during flight, detonating
devices, and the dangers of poten-
tially recovering an FPV drone were
discussed.
The section covering the use of
both FPV and commercial dual-use
drones consisted of several topics,
which were practically demonstra-
ted in the field. Participants practi-
ced frequency switching, tracking
an object without losing it, selecting
and preparing a hideout, and lear-
ning both proven teamwork tech-
niques and those no longer used
on the battlefield. These were just a
few of the skills the trainees had to
master within a few days.
among Ukrainian EOD technicians
in the ongoing war and the shorte-
ned training time for soldiers per-
forming EOD duties. The tactics of
mining frontline roads with drones,
which force slower and more cau-
tious driving, not recommended
when fleeing from an armed FPV
drone, were discussed.
The workshops demonstrated
anti-EOD team traps, factory set-
tings for being impossible to remo-
ve, and improvised explosive de-
vices using mines such as TM-62,
MPP61, and PTMiBAIII.
In the case of RPG-7 grenades atta-
ched to drones, the characteristics
of electronic devices arming the
Drones
in Sabotage
Drones
in Sabotage
Drones
in Sabotage
Drones
in Sabotage
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