Desperate for equipment Russia mounts vehicles with decades-old naval guns

Desperate times call for desperate measures
Decades old weapons are being reimagined
A very interesting weapon
Originally made for patrol boats and trawlers
Not the first time we've seen weird weapons in Ukraine
The MT-LB equipped with a proper naval gun...
Introduced in 1953
These weapons are still killing machines
2700 yards of range
Ukraine's old weapons are still better
“Its steel hull is half an inch thick at its thickest”
Easily destroyed by Ukrainian forces
Not bad if they're used as anti-aircraft guns
Russia's mounting vehicle losses
1819 tanks have been taken out
Has Russia lost lost half its tank fleet?
Expect to see more Frankenvehicles
Desperate times call for desperate measures

Russian commanders are so desperate for equipment that they’ve begun mounting decades-old naval guns on ancient armored tractors according to newly leaked images.

Photo by Twitter @Baterial1

Decades old weapons are being reimagined

Ukranian Defense Forces captured the armored chassis of a Soviet-era MT-LB that had been equipped with a 2M-7 gunboat turrets originally develop in the 1940s. 

Photo by Reddit

A very interesting weapon

“An interesting Russian MT-LB variant was captured by the Ukrainian army in the vicinity of Vuhledar,” wrote Ukraine Weapons Tracker in a Twitter post.

Photo by Reddit

Originally made for patrol boats and trawlers

“The APC was gunned with a 2M-7 naval turret with 2 KPV 14.5mm heavy machine guns, originally intended to be installed in patrol boats and trawlers.”

Photo by @UAWeapons

Not the first time we've seen weird weapons in Ukraine

This wasn’t the first jerry-rigged armored vehicle found by Ukrainian forces according to Forbes' David Axe, who reported on Russia’s growing engineering ingenuities. 

Photo by @oryxspioenkop

The MT-LB equipped with a proper naval gun...

“In early March,” Axe wrote, “photos circulated online depicting MT-LBs with 2M-3 naval turrets welded to their roofs.”

Photo by Twitter @clashreport

Introduced in 1953

“The 2M-3 is two 25-millimeter auto-cannons, one atop the other in an enclosed casing,” Axe added, noting that the “2M-3 made its debut in 1953.”

Photo by Hine Phantom, Own Work, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2M-3M-0882.JPG

These weapons are still killing machines

While these vehicles may look absurd to us, Axe pointed out that they were still extremely dangerous pieces of equipment. 

2700 yards of range

A Russian MT-LB equipped with a 2M-3 naval gun can shoot as far as 2700 yards when engaged with opposing units according to Axe, who compared the weapon system to Ukraine’s equally old Soviet-era MT-LB-12 multipurpose armored fighting vehicle. 

Photo by Twitter @TheDeadDistrict

Ukraine's old weapons are still better

The difference between a Russian MT-LB with a naval gun mount and a Ukrainian MT-LB-12 is range,” Axe wrote. “An MT-LB-12 can fire as far as 9,000 yards.”

“Its steel hull is half an inch thick at its thickest”

“So the Russian Frankenvehicle must get a lot closer to the enemy in order to be effective,” Axe continued, adding that the other problem with Russia’s MT-LB monsters was their extremely thin armor. “Its steel hull is half an inch thick at its thickest.”

Easily destroyed by Ukrainian forces

“Ukrainian missile teams, tankers, and artillery gunners—including the crews of MT-LB-12s—can hit the weirdo Russian vehicles from thousands of yards beyond the weirdos’ own firing range,” Axe pointed out. 

Not bad if they're used as anti-aircraft guns

Axe speculated that these vehicles might have been made to serve an anti-aircraft role and, if that was so, it wasn’t “a bad one.” But the construction of these weapons revealed the deeper problem Russia is facing in Ukraine, its growing equipment shortage. 

Russia's mounting vehicle losses

Russian forces have lost a total of 9567 destroyed, damaged, or captured vehicles since Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine last year according to Oryx, an open-source intelligence group that tracks equipment losses on both sides of the war. 

1819 tanks have been taken out

In total, Oryx has visual confirmation that Russia has lost at least 1819 tanks in Ukraine, a number some experts have said represents half of the country’s total available stock. 

Has Russia lost lost half its tank fleet?

In mid-February 2023, chair of the International Institute of Strategic Studies John Chipman claimed Russia had lost “around 50% of its pre-invasion fleet,” as quoted by The Guardian. 

Expect to see more Frankenvehicles

If Chapman's prediction is true, then we should expect to see far more Frankenvehicles making their way onto Ukrainian battlefields—though we shouldn’t expect modified MT-LBs to fare well against modern Challenger II and Leopard II tanks.

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