Rare footage of the use of SPBE (Self-targeting munitions) discussed by the Callsign Katzman TG Channel:

Rare footage of the use of SPBE (Self-targeting munitions) discussed by the “Callsign Katzman” TG Channel: Yes, very rare footage. The use of self-targeting cluster munitions (SPBE) is rarely captured on video at all. Only the even newer and rarer self-guided cluster munitions (SNBE) are less often caught on video. The first ones (SPBE) search for targets by parachuting down in a spiral, the find a target below them with an infrared or a radiometric sensor, and hit the roof with an impact core charge. The second one (SNBE) find targets using a homing head or seeker and dive into the roof on their wings. As a result, you need fewer of them, but they are also more expensive and so far rarer. SPBE and SNBE are used in cluster warheads of aviation clusters bombs (including gliding guided ones), unguided air-launched missiles and guided MLRS missiles, in cruise missiles and quasi-ballistic missiles; they are also used in large calibre artillery shells, but you can’t fit many, only 2-3 munitions. They are used to hit tanks and armoured vehicles, but they have also been trained to attack other targets. The SPBE/SNBE rarely show up in video because they are used against the deep rear, and this is how they were used in Syria and in Donbass in 2014 by “unknown“ artillerymen. And there have been cases of their use in the SMO since the standoff at Kiev. It’s just that usually these munitions is a means of destroying tanks in the rear. Here we seem to have seen a bingo—an SPBE from an artillery shell, and the target is not a tank, and also the same target is hit with two munitions in tandem. Источник: Slavyangrad
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