The Soviet Russian S-75 Dvina Surface-to-Air Missile ☭
Ойын-сауық
AusArmour Assistant Manager, Jason Belgrave, gives us a tour of the Cold War-era Soviet Russian S-75 Dvina Surface-to-Air Missile!
One of the most produced anti-aircraft missiles ever! ⚔️
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Пікірлер: 120
Love to know the story on how it ended up in Australia 🇦🇺
@cm275
8 ай бұрын
A lot of Soviet stuff in Western museums was either captured from Iraq or acquired after the Cold War when the old Warsaw Pact countries joined NATO.
@StuSaville
8 ай бұрын
They mentioned in an earlier video that it came from Bulgaria.
@alangordon3283
8 ай бұрын
They bought it or were gifted it like many other museums around the world 🙄
A fascinating platform, basic Soviet tech that gets the job done. Thank you Jason Belgrave for this amazing walk-around.
@paulparker8298
8 ай бұрын
This was cutting edge technology in the 1950s when it was commissioned
@russwoodward8251
8 ай бұрын
@@paulparker8298 yes, ain’t that something? More like a V2 than an M42 HIMARS.
@icantaimpg3d776
7 ай бұрын
@@paulparker8298yes but later it gets outclassed by 2K11 Krug, 2K12 Kub and S-125 Pechora/Neva
Jason is a military equipment encyclopedia...Amazing!
@paulvenn4447
7 ай бұрын
He's written awesome books too!
Outstanding video and presentation.
@plainnpretty
8 ай бұрын
I agree
@gowdsake7103
8 ай бұрын
Really you like SO inserted everywhere ?
@Gachaheathunter190
3 ай бұрын
@@gowdsake7103Yo, what even is SO!?
Thanks Jason, brilliant tutorial on a weapon system I had never heard of. And never thought you would have at the museum, Cheers
I like this video because it doesn't try to be overdramatic. no annoying music either
@gregsmith451
6 ай бұрын
Hear hear!!!!!
Saw it in person at the museum - bigger than I expected - impressive to see after reading and watching it for so long.
Another excellent video. Fascinating topic and information. Very well done.
Went to the museum for my first time 2 days ago, and saw this, nice to see a video on it aswell
Good video. Thank you Jason et al. Interesting to hear that it took fourteen of these missiles to shoot down Gary Powers.
The flying telephone pole.
Great video Jason 👍👍👍
Hi AusArmour. Love your work 👍
Very entertained and informative. Thank you!
They have one of these on display in Havana at the Museum of the Revolution, beside some of the parts of the U2 they shot down. It used to be rattle canned with Cuban Chrome, but i think they have since repainted it.
Brilliant presentation!
Really enjoyed your presentation thanks
SA-2 was the bane of the U.S. air force during the Vietnam war, a truly terrifying weapon. It was a demonstration of the Russian focus on highly effective air defense systems, carried through to this day with outstanding systems such as S-300, S-400, and S-500 which have no peer in the west.
@user-ff8uf5xu1j
16 күн бұрын
actually S-300/400 can be compared to the MIM-104 Patriot PAC-2/3.
really good video...thanks!
Need to get the missile up and running so people can go for a ride next festival🤣🤣👍
Did you guys follow my request or not... thank you very much. You made my day, you made my weekend. Amazing story about GUIDELINE. Thanks Jason for a FEW information. You are guys the best. Best regards from Poland 🇵🇱
3:04 Rendezvous with a Thunderchief. The wiki page for the F-105 shows a shoot down possibly from the same sequence. But then there were many so who knows.
The missile is nice and all ... but I love that prime mover.
@_b_x_b_1063
Ай бұрын
ZiL-157 truck
I love your channel just great and so very interesting
🏆🤗🙏🇺🇲 Thank you for sharing
Brilliant video. Can you please do the AT-T / BAT-M tractor at the museum.
Great video. For Europeans, there's one on display at Militärhistorisches Museum Flugplatz Berlin-Gatow
Gotta be pretty scary when that missile makes it onto your radar or even worse... field of view. As per usual, Jason packs a LOT of info in a clean concise manner, G'day 🦘
@IntrospectorGeneral
8 ай бұрын
After SA-2's started being supplied to North Vietnam around 1965 American pilots nicknamed them 'Russian telephone poles'. I've read one early pilot report where he was puzzled by this telephone pole thing floating up towards him before passing him at high speed in a very near miss.
Really cool photos of SAM sites laid out
We got a couple of these down the road (as well as a dummy one made of bamboo which was used as a decoy back in the day).
I just love it when people know thier shit. (And can articulate it) 👍👍
Soviet techs went to Vietnam to help the Vietnamese operate these missiles. The Vietnamese were actually given a older version then the Soviets were using which Vietnamese people's army complained about because it didn't have good anti jamming ability.
@icantaimpg3d776
7 ай бұрын
They did upgrade our S-75 systems later I believe
That's a HUGE, labor intensive rocket, but it definitely got the job done.
Excellent
Impressive looking missile
Thank you.
The most dangerous flying telephone pole....
Any time I hear anything about missiles, I can't not think of the video about how a missile knows where it is 🤣
Another class commentary.
Uses the Tonka Hypergol combination from WWII
Wow thats a lot of rocket! in the movies it always seems like some tiny little thing is chasing planes all over the sky...that thing is like a narrow bus!lol
This thing gave allied pilots hell, ive heard it looked like a telephone pole flying at you.
ДвинА (Dvina) - river
To operate a Guideline... You need a guideline to guide the Guideline
Top commentary
Super. An unexpected surprise. Kind of like the missiile itself. Just occurred to me. OK,solid fuel booster. Any idea just what the ingredients are ? And then liquid fuel. With a storage tank for what,topping off ? OK,any idea just which ingredients make that up ? A system reliable enough to be used for decades. Pretty impressive.
@bami2
8 ай бұрын
The liquid fuel in the fuel cell was probably Tonka/R-Stoff, known in the Soviet Union as TG-02. Designed by ze Germans at the end of ww2 for the Wasserfall surface-to-air system, and then joinked after the war by the Soviets and used in a lot of rocket systems either as fuel or as igniter. No idea what the solid rocket booster uses for fuel though.
@paulmanson253
8 ай бұрын
@@bami2 Hey thanks for that. I remember watching VHS videos on airplanes. And wishing I could find out about their engines,their brakes,and well,stuff. And nowadays I can watch an aircraft engine rebuild,oh,the videos out on the SR 71 just an example. Nuts and bolts stuff and I can reach out and someone like you can answer. There is a price for everything but to me that is pretty darned incredible. All the best.
@orbitalair2103
8 ай бұрын
The solid fuel was likely a rubberized polymer, with a ammonium perchlorate oxidizer with maybe a powdered aluminum additive to get a higher ISP, specific impulse. It would be mixed together to form a liquid which would be vacuum poured into the case with a removable mandrel to form a core . The rubberized polymers of the 50s weren't very stable, and would limit shelf life. HTPB polymers of the 70s era is more stable.
@jasonbelgrave2831
8 ай бұрын
I don't have the solid fuel composition, however the liquid fuel was said to be Nitric acid as the oxidiser along with 56% kerosene and 40 % Tricresol (an inhibitor)
Besides U2 of Powers it was very successful in Vietnam.
0:28 This is not a parade on May day, this is a parade on Victory Day (May 9)!
Fascinating, thanks. Used in the Arab-Israeli wars?
Would look good parked in my driveway
Must finish me Trumpeter 1/35th kit
This much for one plane, while we can kill a human with our hands. This thing is massive I really like museums with this type of stuff it's not common to see
Looks like a Low rent Nike Hurcules with out the dial a yield Nuke 😉
A telegraph pole sized missile weighing 2 tons with a warhead weighing nearly 200 kg .... and capable of Mach 3 flight 😮
I would more interested in the story how you managed to get hold of it..... ?!!!
@frostedbutts4340
8 ай бұрын
Very common weapon system used all over the USSR and allies. After the breakup I'm sure they were cheap as surplus.
Why 4pm HK time
Czyli już czas na karpia skoro już królowie czekają
I wonder though if the SA2 was ever converted to ground usage.... apparently veteran Israeli tankers remarked how Egyptian SAM crews in desperation launcued SA2 missiles at them....
1:10 ...rumor has it that it was a nuclear airburst...
From which part of Australia is the narrator's accent (*)? And is it strong compared to the average Australian accent? (*)no problem to understand him, by the way.
@jamesrowlands8971
8 ай бұрын
You could find an accent like that anywhere in Australia.
@shawnc5188
8 ай бұрын
He’s speaking with a ‘normal’ accent that isn’t very ‘strong’, but also in Brisbane, you can meet blokes who speak like this kzread.info/dash/bejne/a4V3ydOKlNDYYLA.htmlsi=i3MGxPQTT1Z4UT2d
@harleydavo1099
8 ай бұрын
Just an aussie.
@awf6554
8 ай бұрын
He's got a fairly broad Aussie accent.
@Zorglub1966
8 ай бұрын
Thank you lads! 👍
A challenge try getting through 5 min without saying SO!
good for a bunny shot.
Flying telephone pole?
Cheiftan wishes he knew as much as this bloke.
Captin Ding Dong Wang
It gave the Israelis quite a headache.
S75(Sam 2 Vietnam war . killer B52 american )
Интересно! А у нас в Питере, в Артиллерийском музее, нет "Найк-Геркулеса"! У российских олигархов денег не хватило, чтобы купить?
😊😛😛😛😛😛❤❤❤❤❤👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
thank J for the video ...here in the western is this impression that soviets / Russian are idiots and they live in caves and just discover fire ....PS for all Americans fan boys take a f 22 in Siberia and try to have maintenance there , but ya TY The Australian Armour & Artillery Museum for the education
So not interested in glorifying anything to do with that heinous regime.
@at9370
7 ай бұрын
Thanks for answering a question nobody asked. I hope that medal for virtue arrives some day
Yet "simple farmers" defeating US myth still persists.
@MicMc539
8 ай бұрын
If only the U.S. would stop attacking simple Farmers!
@ponysaurusrex5008
8 ай бұрын
You're wrong, it's TWO different kinds of "simple farmers" that defeated the US. Keep coping m8.
@MicMc539
8 ай бұрын
@@ponysaurusrex5008 YANKEE GO HOME !
@icantaimpg3d776
7 ай бұрын
Well the NLF/VC was for the most part, militia level equipments and were largely farmers
So we have this in a museam. But can't build them ourselves to shoot down ballistic missiles. I call BS. BS man here. Got some BS.
@VincentNajger1
8 ай бұрын
well...we likely CAN....it's whether we SHOULD or not. There's a LOT of diplomatic shenanigans and politics involved. But if push comes to shove, watch how fast we can start mass producing much better designs than this. Why spend squillions building them if we aren't going to use them within their allotted lifespan? There is little point. We just end up enriching the war profiteers......so we won't make most war materiel until we need to, which is fine by me...much better places to waste that money.
@MicMc539
8 ай бұрын
@@VincentNajger1 Well, ''push comes to shove, watch how fast we can start mass producing ''', happened about 18 months ago and there's no new production lines operating. Just lots of $Billions being shifted to Boeing, Thales and Raytheon. I think you mean the other side. Peace.
@keithammleter3824
8 ай бұрын
Australian developed ground to air missiles in the 1950's.
@stephenbachman132
8 ай бұрын
@@keithammleter3824 what are they called i will google that
@keithammleter3824
8 ай бұрын
Australia developed surface to air missiles in the 1950''s, culminating in the Ikarra anti-submarine missile, widely used in several navies, including the RAN and RN. but as technology got more sophisticated, it became cheaper to buy from the USA. The only thing stopping us now are the politicians. If war comes, just you watch
It blew a lot of f-105 thunderchiefs and b52 bombers out of the sky during the Vietnam war!