Thanks to the inventor and his team, there are already dozens of different types of products that are helping the Ukrainian army on the front lines.
Vasily Tsapyuk, an inventor from Lutsk, has created about a dozen devices for the Ukrainian army that will make it easier for them to perform combat missions at the front. This is stated in the schedule of Channel 5, which aired on Thursday, August 17.
The military gave Vasily Tsapyuk the nickname “Vasilyoboronprom” for creativity and high performance. The man arranged the assembly of his inventions not only in different parts of Ukraine, but also beyond its borders. Most of the required components are made using 3D printers and the team exchanges files to print with each other using electronic media.
“To protect ourselves and the person, we do not give one hand over the whole process,” Tsapyuk said.
The Ukrainian showed reporters a few of his inventions. The first is a quadcopter made using 3D printing, no one in Ukraine did this before Tsapyuk. The inventor and his team will continue to test the seven-inch drone, in the future they want to completely abandon foreign components and switch to domestic parts.
The team has also developed cases for HEAT shells: they are delivered to the military and loaded with explosives directly on the spot and dropped onto the invaders using drones. Vasily’s workshop also prints handles for anti-drone weapons, which helped neutralize many Russian drones.
Another engineering invention of Vasily and his team is the Mavka drone weapon, which is moisture resistant, resistant to strong impacts and weighs only a few kilograms. The cost price of the simplest version is 60 thousand hryvnia, and the developer assures that this is the lowest price on the world market today.
Recall that in early August we wrote that a robotic platform for machine guns and ammunition was created for the Armed Forces of Ukraine. A new technical development for the Armed Forces of Ukraine will help fighters to fight from afar: for this they will place a machine gun on the platform and approach the positions of the RF Armed Forces.
And in mid-July, it became known that inventors from the Armed Forces of Ukraine were testing ground-based unmanned aerial vehicles mined in the Kiev region. Curious and former soldier Yevgeny Gnatyuk, together with his colleagues, tested anti-tank mines on remote-controlled vehicles.
Source: Focus
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Ashley Fitzgerald is an accomplished journalist in the field of technology. She currently works as a writer at 24 news breaker. With a deep understanding of the latest technology developments, Ashley’s writing provides readers with insightful analysis and unique perspectives on the industry.