52 comments

  • ralferoo 18 hours ago
    I remember an anecdote our robotics lecturer told our university class in 1995, which was about how in the west we try to make expensive things that are the absolute best of technology and how the other side didn't have that luxury and relied on ingenuity.

    He described a cold war Russian missile they had somehow obtained and were tasked with trying to reverse engineer. Ostensibly, it was thought to be a heat seeking missile, but there seemed to be no control or guidance circuitry at all. There was a single LDR (light dependent resistor) attached to a coil which moved a fin. That was it. Total cost for the guidance system maybe a couple of dollars, compared to hundreds of thousands for the cheapest guidance systems we had at the time.

    The key insight was that if you shined a light at it, the fin moved one way and if there was no light the fin moved the opposite way. That still didn't explain how this was able to guide a missile, but the next realisation was that the other fins were angled so when this was flying (propelled by burning rocket fuel), the missile was inherently unstable - rotating around the axis of thrust and wobbling slightly. With the moveable fin in place, it was enough to straighten it up when it was facing a bright light, and wobble more when there was no bright light. Because it was constantly rotating, you could think of it as defaulting to exploring a cone around its current direction, and when it could see a light it aimed towards the centre of that cone. It was then able to "explore the sky" and latch on to the brightest thing it could see, which would hopefully be the exhaust from a plane, and so it would be able to lock on, and adjust course on a moving target with no "brain" at all.

    • Animats 14 hours ago
      That's roughly how the original Sidewinder worked. The original concept was to reduce near-misses. If the pilot could get on the target's tail and aim at the engines, it usually got a hit. That was the same task as getting into firing position for guns. Hit rate about 8% in combat.

      Later versions allowed launches from longer ranges and from off-angles.

    • gorgoiler 17 hours ago
      I believe there was a similar weapon being developed in the west, only recently, which involved a missile with contra rotating halves joined by a clutch. The fixed fins caused it to always steer one way. It flew straight by releasing the clutch to spin up the front half, negating the steering effect. Grabbing the clutch caused it to stop spinning and veer off in one direction.

      Presto! Two axis continuous flight control with a 1-bit input.

      Edit: my memory wasn’t far off. It’s Starstreak: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starstreak

      • coredog64 17 hours ago
        35-ish years ago there was a pitch for cheap, high velocity, spin-stabilized rockets that were deployed in dense pods on the A-10. The rocket's seeker could divert some small amount of thrust at an angle for guidance, but otherwise that was it. I can't recall if it ever made it out of the pilot phase, but obviously nothing new under the sun.
    • srean 17 hours ago
      Strike a light in front of a parked but otherwise active fin guided heat-seeker and its freaky to watch it come alive like a lazy beagle eyeing a treat.
    • snitty 16 hours ago
      This is shockingly similar to microbial motility mechanisms. Like random walk plus chemotaxis.
    • mapt 15 hours ago
      This sounds like the early Sidewinder or other 1940's/1950's attempts at infrared homing missiles.
    • 3abiton 12 hours ago
      This is an interesting thought, as if I remember correctly, there was this theory that once something is known to be possible to discover, it only takes dedication to achieve it (George Dantzig as an example)
    • crtified 14 hours ago
      That frugal, creative mindset is also the default for people of modest income everywhere in the world - borne of necessity.
    • chroma 17 hours ago
      Unless it was nighttime or the engagement happened at low altitude on a cloudy day, wouldn’t that usually lock onto the sun?
      • bluescrn 17 hours ago
        The wobble would only 'scan' a limited field of view, so only if the sun was in that view
        • chroma 15 hours ago
          Also wouldn't it only work for aircraft that are flying away from the launcher? IR & light signatures are much weaker from the front. At best I think this guidance system would only be economical for ground-based launchers, as the cost of aircraft and their limited payloads mean you want the most effective weapons onboard, not the cheapest.

          Annoyingly, I can't find any information online about such a simple guidance system. The earliest homing missile fielded by the Soviets was the K-13[1], which used technology reversed-engineered from the AIM-9 Sidewinder[2]. Later systems seem to be improvements upon that technology, not simplifications.

          1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-13_(missile)

          2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIM-9_Sidewinder

          • Tadpole9181 15 hours ago
            > Also wouldn't it only work for aircraft that are flying away from the launcher?

            Yes, pretty much all early guided missiles of the sort were what's called "rear-aspect".

            Can't see the plume - can't make a boom.

    • dosssman 17 hours ago
      Similar to how moths guide themselves toward light
    • trhway 15 hours ago
      that sounds like crude-fied version of first Sidewinders.
    • Gud 18 hours ago
      Incredible
    • dzhiurgis 14 hours ago
      > That still didn't explain how this was able to guide a missile

      That does explain why it lands on civilian areas tho

    • dandanua 15 hours ago
      > with no "brain" at all

      It seems this is how Russia moves in general. Hopefully, this will end at some point.

  • Mizza 23 hours ago
    This is bonkers. Video on GitHub: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDO2EvXyncE

    I'm impressed by the kid's engineering and gumption, but I think he's a bit.. misguided, if you'll pardon the pun. The video ends with shots of Russian drone war, and, bizarrely, photos of David Koresh.

    I don't think this ends well.

    • mikkupikku 23 hours ago
      > The video ends with shots of Russian drone war, and, bizarrely, photos of David Koresh.

      You're omitting that the end of the video also features pictures of Martin Luther King, Vietnamese civilians during America's invasion of their country and Afghani Mujahideen freedom fighters during the Soviet Union's invasion of theirs; I think he's trying to make a point about technology enhancing the capabilities of people who are in any conflict with conventionally powerful forces, not an endorsement of David Koresh.

      • roysting 22 hours ago
        It’s really odd how people will so easily fixate on the bone the government consisting of maniacal, narcissistic, psychopathic, pathological liars will throw them; while totally ignoring that the pathological lying, evil, murderous people in and of the government are constantly and ceaselessly, lying and murdering.

        There now carpet bombing and murdering people in Iran, just like they mass murdered people in Gaza, and they’re doing it to cover up and distract from the fact that our government consists of raping pedophiles. That is who we are governed by. … but David Koresh excuses it and makes any opposition invalid, of close.

        • einpoklum 22 hours ago
          I am completely against the US-Israeli war on Iran. That said, they are not carpet-bombing Iran. That is, they appear to be selecting individual targets rather than engaging in carpet bombing entire areas:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carpet_bombing

          The choice of targets is not legally legitimate (and the entire campaign is illegal AFAICT), and sometimes they used old/invalid intel, like what happened with that girls' school that's supposedly close to an IRGC base. Still, it is mostly individual buildings or installations rather than an attempt to flatten entire areas.

          • mda 16 hours ago
            Oh so your line is carpet bombing? The attackers has shown they can do almost any atrocity many times (already killed thousands of woman and children in Gaza with zero remorse or accountability)
            • einpoklum 13 hours ago
              Yes, they have shown that. I don't understand your question about my "line", you'll need to be more explicit.
            • itsthecourier 16 hours ago
              what's your line? respecting "sovereignty" of dictators and mass murders/internet blocks/Armageddonian Islamic cosmology?

              talking about "your line" is way too simplistic. think in second and third order consequences. Iran exported and financially supported terrorists because of a repressive theological dictatorship

              • mda 14 hours ago
                I see, so this was to free Iranians from their dictators right? How is it going so far?
          • Saline9515 22 hours ago
            Not carpet bombing, yet. Israelis said the same at the start of the most recent Gaza war, which ended with large neighborhoods being destroyed.
          • srean 22 hours ago
            They are using white phosphorus on populated areas in South Lebanon. That's as vile as one can get.
            • saati 22 hours ago
              Be that as it may, carpet bombing has a specific meaning, and it's not bombing one's not on board with.
              • srean 22 hours ago
                In the context of Iran I agree with you.

                Not so sure about South Lebanon. From whatever media coverage I saw, some look not that different from carpet bombing.

            • victorbjorklund 22 hours ago
              Evidence for the claim?
            • einpoklum 13 hours ago
              Indeed, Israel and the US are quite vile. I have said so many times on placard which have then been ripped apart by the Israeli police. I only made a comment about the term "carpet bombing", as that is a specific term which means something else than "wide-scale bombing".
            • NoMoreNicksLeft 15 hours ago
              I always loved the "white phosphorous" stuff. The meme appeared on reddit out of nowhere, and once it did it made everyone who heard it completely utterly stupid. Suddenly it's a chemical weapon, the worst sort of atrocity anyone's heard of.

              The meme will never die. Skynet could be hunting down the last of humanity hiding in caves, and those humans will be crying "maybe it will just be nukes, please god, don't let the robots white phosphorous us!".

              • srean 15 hours ago
                I have handled this stuff (from remnants of unexploded munitions) and I know what it is.

                It is not spectacular but it is vile and terrifying. No amount of your "rape, oh that's just surprise sex" will diminish what it is.

              • rexpop 11 hours ago
                Reasonable people know to take your flippant tone for the colorful warning of a rotten, toxic brain.
                • srean 2 hours ago
                  A pinhead side pellet on his body would shut him up pretty quick.

                  Well, not, it would be screams of agony.

                • NoMoreNicksLeft 5 hours ago
                  If these reasonable people knew that, then why did you have to say this? It's the dog whistle that they need so that they'll behave as expected...

                  White phosphorous is a way to light up the night sky during warfare. Like all warfare, it is dangerous to human life even when that's not it's direct intent... people fall off cliffs and shit while fighting (or running from it). Their deaths are no less tragic for it.

                  But when crackpots start screaming "they're trying to make people stampede off cliffs to their deaths!", it shows you for the very unreasonable and quite likely mentally ill person that you are.

                  • srean 2 hours ago
                    > White phosphorous is a way to light up the night sky during warfare

                    Lol No. Hilariously no. The thing to use to light up night sky is Magnesium (mostly, also aluminum. nowadays specialized resins). The primary use of WP is for smoke, but it is used illegally as an incendiary munition.

                    For someone who talks so much about WP I did not expect this level of ignorance. Empty vessels sounds much, I suppose.

                    Use of WP is banned * in warfare by international treaty, on the grounds of avoiding unnecessary cruelty and suffering. There are other banned weapons, for example, dumdum bullets. *There is a specific exception made for WP, which the Israeli army habitually and illegally abuses.

                    No other army is known to be a repeat offender with regards to WP. It's use in an area with civilian population is strictly prohibited. Cliffs are not.

                    Given the number of false equivalences you have been drawing you sound like a shill.

          • roysting 20 hours ago
            I understand your compulsion to rationalize things, make excuses for your abusers, but I ask you to contemplate for a moment what you are defending. One, hopefully we have all seen the genocidal bombing of Gaza turning whole regions of large apartment blocks into an hell-scape of rubble with tens of thousands of people buried underneath them; people, not animals, not “just brown people”, not “terrorists”… people like you, like your wife or girlfriend, like your daughter or son or nephew…people who also want to live just like you even if far more humbly, without all the waste and decadence of the avg American. Should your loved ones be bombed and buried under a resort and luxury condo towers because a clan of billionaires do not like that you won’t leave your land?

            Two, at the very least, the most generous interpretation, the very first strike to start an illegal war of aggression that the Nuremberg trial clearly established as the “mother of all subsequent evil”, was not only on a girls school that killed dozens and dozens of young girls, but did so in a “double tap“ process where they observed that people arrived in ambulances and parents in cars to pick up very small humans, and then they hit them again with another missile. Let us be clear about what you are excusing… They intentionally splattered the guts and flesh of young girls and their parents rushing to save them all over a 300 foot diameter blast radius.

            We can lie to ourselves that may have been a “mistake“ but as established during the Nunberg trials, there is no defense in claiming that if you started the illegal and immoral war of aggression.

            Three, why are they hiding what is happening if it’s all above board? Why would they not permit unfettered access showing what is being targeted bombing and that the Iranians are lying when they say that thousands of civilian structures have been bombed including schools and hospitals? You trust Hegseth? Trump? Need I say more?

            And all that is without even addressing that these people have done nothing but lie and lie about lying about lying.

            And let’s also remember that as shocking as the files that gave been released, they have not even released even the slightly uncomfortable parts of the Epstein Files, let alone arrested any of the rapists and pedophiles that are now on yet another murder spree, starting that prosecuting everyone would cause the whole system to collapse!

            If want to believe people like that, people who do nothing but lie, rape, murder and cover up for it; then I guess there is nothing else to say and you will have to deal with that on your own as it eats you up from the inside. I for one am opposed to these types of people and actions and will speak out about it even if people don’t like it. And I refuse to make excuses for it for any reason, be it personal weakness or comfort.

            • vidarh 20 hours ago
              They did not defend it or make excuses for it. They argued about the very specific claim of carpet bombing in Iran, before pointing out the entire campaign is illlegal and calling the choice of targets "not legally legitimate".

              They also said nothing about Gaza.

              I share your concern about both Gaza and Iran, but criticising people for calling out an exaggeration is not helping anyone.

              • mda 16 hours ago
                "Ah look but they haven't carped bombed Iran" was their argument and it sounds really weird.
                • koshergweilo 12 hours ago
                  That was not their argument at all. Their argument was that we're not carpet bombing Iran.

                  They're quite explicit that they're on your side, why question their motivations?

            • wombatpm 17 hours ago
              And now they are claiming due to the war, they will stop releasing the remaining files.
        • huijzer 22 hours ago
          I was reading your comment and thought you were a bit too extreme, but then I thought about it and was like "Hmmm. Yes. Sounds pretty accurate actually." So yes I agree.
      • radialstub 22 hours ago
        > I think he's trying to make a point about technology enhancing the capabilities of people who are in any conflict with conventionally powerful forces

        Which is absurd, since all the technology he used was manufactured by the conventionally powerful forces and they can decide to not sell you their stuff.

    • shrubble 22 hours ago
      The fact that Koresh and his group held off Federal officers who stormed their building with simple guns that anyone can buy, is likely the point.

      Out of five and a half minutes of video, David Koresh appears for perhaps three seconds.

      It does put a new twist on the recent controversy about 3d printers needing to be licensed, however.

      • steve-atx-7600 14 hours ago
        I think this is within the intent of the 2nd amendment. Having groups of citizens check the power of their government by being armed comes with the the downside of abusive types forming cults. I think this tradeoff is worth it. Mass shooting evens and cults harming people are obviously terrible. But, I prefer living with some of that knowing that it provides recourse for becoming like the majority of Iranians that are so helpless that at least 10s of thousands were slaughtered in daylight by their government merely for protesting. It’s easy to discount the possibility of becoming an oppressed citizenry if you grew up in the US where the worst you’ve heard about is maybe Kent state or early 2026 ice murdering unarmed citizens. Armed citizens are not a guarantee from oppression, but I think it’s important insurance.
      • randomNumber7 18 hours ago
        Yeah the solution is simple.

        Just licence everything private people can buy except (healthy food). /S

        Microcontrollers and electric motors are too dangerous for the general public.

    • laborcontract 22 hours ago
      soo... i have no kept up with what's gone on in russia/ukraine. Are those drone videos what i think they are – drones sneaking up on humans and, presumably, ceasing them of life?

      edit: Ok, I googled the guy

        > I have read the works of authors such as Jean Baudrillard, Desmod Morris, 
        and Ted Kaczynski who believe that technology is harming us and the world.
      
        https://wiki.opensourceecology.org/wiki/User:Alisherkhojayev
      • sorenjan 22 hours ago
        Both Russia and Ukraine build millions of drones per year, most of them fpv drones that are basically remote controlled flying grenades. There's plenty of electronic warfare with radio jamming, so in some places they use drone mounted spools of fiber optic cable to control them. It's probably been the most impactful weapon type in the war for the past years.
      • mikkupikku 22 hours ago
        Yes. Both sides are using explosive FPV drones, flown directly into soldiers (as well as other forms of drone warfare.)
        • laborcontract 22 hours ago
          thank you. that was unnerving to watch.
          • ceejayoz 21 hours ago
            Yeah, this genie is well and truly out of the bottle.
      • pjc50 18 hours ago
        > have no kept up with what's gone on in russia/ukraine

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Russo-Ukrain...

        "between 400,000 and 1.5 million estimated casualties (killed and wounded) during the Russian invasion of Ukraine from 24 February 2022 to November 2025"

        Mostly due to artillery. Both sides are firing in the region of 10,000 155mm shells per day. For years.

    • phplovesong 21 hours ago
      What started in Ukraine, this is modern warfare. Like most "consumer" goods that are mass produced, you can now get a capable strike force for peanuts.

      The russians have taken close to 1.5 million casulties because ukraine engineering for cheap drones. Putin really, really f-ed up his "3 day military operation".

    • JKCalhoun 23 hours ago
      Who knew there were war bros.
      • tclancy 22 hours ago
        We might need them. Would be better than my theory that this country will recover at some point after they destroy the EPA and reintroduce leaded gas because that's what made this country great which leads to a generation of kids who are willing to throw bricks at cops again.
    • roysting 23 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • Hnrobert42 22 hours ago
        It is exciting to know a secret no one else does. David vs Goliath stories have always been powerful. It is seductive to think you have outsmarted the rest of society.

        Be careful who you let manipulate those emotions.

        • roysting 22 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • idiotsecant 22 hours ago
            You get that the post you're replying to is saying that the idea that you have knowledge that few others do is appealing and can lead to bad decision making, right?

            Ascribing evil to someone who is trying to make a point in the gentlest and most respectful way possible makes you look like a crazy person, btw.

            • roysting 20 hours ago
              I used to not think much of Waco and even remember seeing it on TV and my takeaway being basically “some crazies burned themselves instead of submitting”, because that was the line.

              But that is not at all the actual story. Just think of how much the government has lied about and how much it constantly lies about everything all the time. You think it’s plausible they were just the most honest and righteous angels that didn’t do nothing at all in Waco? They pathological, murderous liars? I’m just trying to suggest you reconsider things, your relationship with the murderous, lying, psychopathic government.

              Ironically, you seem to not understand what he is saying and doing with his inept, smug comment from a place of ignorance to protect his propaganda… a kind of self-hiding mental virus.

              I get it is easier to believe we understand how the world works because we “learned it” from a government approved teacher when we were kids and we are now successful alpha slaves that have accumulated shiny things, but reality is simply that Waco was not what the government said it was.

              And yet another level of irony, it is precisely what the government relies on, people simply rejecting anything that does not come from the biggest cult, government; the belief that these vile people we call government are any better than Koresh.

              We are now governed by lying, murderous, raping, pedophiles … how is that different than Koresh… just on a massively larger and more evil planet sized scale?

      • myko 22 hours ago
        The white washing of Koresh is sickening to see. Similar to how some in the US idolize the traitor Colonel Robert E Lee.
        • shrubble 22 hours ago
          If this was Usenet, your post would result in a “plonk” very likely.

          Why did almost all Presidents up to and including Eisenhower praise Robert E Lee? Was Eisenhower a traitor also?

          • mikkupikku 21 hours ago
            To be fair, Eisenhower praised Lee's personal and leadership qualities, not the Confederate cause. The GP comment speaks of people who "idolize" Lee, which I think can be presumed to mean people who are on-board with the Confederate cause and by extension racism and slavery, which is pretty much how the subject is viewed by a great many today, but in Eisenhower's time people weren't tuned for twitter-sized ideas and were more capable of recognizing the way some people excelled while also simultaneously being strongly against other aspects of that person. Nuance like having complicated views on complicated people, doesn't do well on much of the internet these days, our culture has moved away from that. Now if you say Lee was a great military officer and also a traitor, people will assume that you mean one of those and just threw in the other to mask your extremist intent or something. People are assumed to be simple, with simple opinions about other simple people.
        • roysting 22 hours ago
          Try to pay attention please. Let’s try this; are you opposed to the government pumping 100 rounds into a person for some imagined “threat” they rationalize about after the fact? Koresh was not a great guy, kind of a piece of shit, just like the people the cops usually gun down, but that does not mean you need to take the low IQ government bait to excuse their lying and wanton murder and constant evil.
          • myko 20 hours ago
            I'm okay with criticizing the government response - they should have arrested him in town. But pretending he was not an awful person is beyond the pale, and I felt the comment I replied to came close to that line.
            • roysting 19 hours ago
              I don’t think anyone claims he wasn’t and awful person, let alone some great person, but it all comes down to government installing the propaganda script in your mind likely all your life through “education” and “entertainment”.

              It’s amazing to me that people who complained about the government’s evils at various points or at the very least whine about how much of a meanie poopy-head the other team is, will just give the government a pass simply because they took the government propaganda bait; hook, line, and sinker.

            • mothballed 19 hours ago
              Maybe he was an awful person, but their warrant was completely bogus. Legal inert grenade shells, legal black powder, and the "automatic gunfire" complete BS accusation that the government never provided evidence of was likely "hellfire triggers" at best.
  • redgridtactical 23 hours ago
    The engineering is genuinely impressive for $96, but naming the repo "MANPADS-System-Launcher-and-Rocket" on GitHub is going to attract exactly the kind of attention you don't want. ITAR implications aside, the interesting part is the mid-flight trajectory recalculation on a $5 sensor. That's the same basic problem military guidance systems solve with hardware that costs thousands.

    The gap between consumer electronics and mil-spec capability keeps shrinking and this is a pretty stark demonstration of where that trend leads. A few years ago this would have required an IMU that cost more than this entire build. The democratization angle cuts both ways though - the same accessibility that makes this cool for hobbyists makes it genuinely concerning from a proliferation standpoint.

    • tclancy 22 hours ago
      > The gap between consumer electronics and mil-spec capability keeps shrinking

      My friend's brother works in munitions and had, in his spare time, designed and prototyped a missile that could be built for about 10k. He pretty much was ignored by the contractor he works for.

      Shockingly, as of a couple weeks ago, they are all hot and bothered to talk.

      • redgridtactical 17 hours ago
        That tracks. The defense primes have zero incentive to make things cheaper — their business model is cost-plus. A guy building something for 10k in his garage is an existential threat to programs billing 500k per unit. Of course they ignored him until the geopolitical situation made it impossible to keep ignoring.
        • srean 15 hours ago
          > That tracks. The defense primes have zero incentive to make things cheaper

          Same in medical imaging industry.

          • Mars008 15 hours ago
            Well, there are cheap portable ultrasound scanners and endoscopes.
            • srean 15 hours ago
              True.

              I was talking about those that are meant for hospitals. Was peripherally involved with a fledgling startup that was developing something cheap. Hospitals straightaway said noway.

              • projektfu 14 hours ago
                They would be desirable in places with poor advanced imaging penetration like Brazil. Usually only the largest city in a state has this sort of imaging.
      • infinitewars 17 hours ago
        If you build a tool optimized for human destruction, you are feeding a system where violence is the default currency
      • Mars008 15 hours ago
        We are heading to robotic wars where abilities and cost efficiency are the key factors. Like today drones in Ukraine war. Attack + defense + automation, + money + production
      • redgridtactical 22 hours ago
        I wonder what could have possibly sparked that... lol
    • hrmtst93837 22 hours ago
      Cheap sensors look impressive in demos but drift and calibration wreck repeatability unless you babysit launches so nobody in defense is sweating this yet.
      • vidarh 21 hours ago
        They should be sweating, because if the other side can fire 100 rockets for $10k that are close enough to not immediately and obviously be off target, and you don't know whether a more expensive one with actual explosives is hiding within that barrage, you now have 100 targets to try to intercept, and suddenly your costs have gone up dramatically while the other sides costs has barely moved.
        • philistine 8 hours ago
          It is warfare, not mere product delivery. The second you fire one of these you reveal your position, making you a target for immediate reprisal. You don't win wars by losing very fine soldiers on homemade close enough shots.
          • vidarh 2 hours ago
            So mount a battery on a truck, fire, move, fire again. Do that on a few hundred trucks, and drive around places without any real target and you have the other side burning through their arsenal real quick.

            This isn't a rocket that is viable when you need to e.g. cross the Persian gulf. But it is a rocket that shows there are potentially viable decoys at a similar cost sufficient to spead fear in an enemy force if you can drive a bunch of trucks close enough to fire off dozens of them each, with the enemy knowing odds are you've hidden a handful of small warheads in there.

            It'd be pointless for a conventional force that has the upper hand. It'd not be pointless for a weaker force or insurgency that needs massive asymmetry in cost to stand a chance.

            EDIT: Heck, build tiny launch batteries in a crate, and drive around dropping launch batteries with a timer, and by the time the first rocket goes off you might've already dropped 10 of them and driven off. Now every car large enough to hold even a small box is a threat, and you have a real quagmire.

        • dgroshev 21 hours ago
          100 rockets for $10k is not happening. The price floor is not dictated by the electronics (which did get cheaper), it's dictated by the rest of the system: propulsion, warheads, arming and safety, QA, traceability, climate and shelf life stability.

          Take a look at Raytheon's manufacturing line: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCCkVAHSzrc That's what it takes to have missiles that are nearly guaranteed to perform to specification every time. You can stockpile the packaged missiles in a non-climate-controlled shed for years, replenish them at sea while being showered with salt water, subject them to shock of a nearby blast while in a VLS, and they will still launch, go up to Mach 13, and catch an incoming ballistic missile nearly every time.

          Sure, Iran's ballistic missiles are simpler than SM-3, but they are still subject to most of the constraints. They still need perfectly cast large size solid rocket motors that don't crack after being stored for a year, they need warheads that only go off when they are supposed to, they still need to trace every part for QA, etc. There's a vast gap, largely invisible to amateurs, between garage prototypes and stockpiled AURs.

          • tgsovlerkhgsel 14 hours ago
            > propulsion, warheads, arming and safety, QA, traceability, climate and shelf life stability.

            The further down the list you go, the more optional the requirements get in a sufficiently dire scenario.

            Shelf life doesn't matter if you are firing them as quickly as you can make them, especially if you actually can make them as quickly as you need them because they're so simple. QA and traceability may matter less if you just accept that you'll occasionally lose a launcher, and even occasionally have a stray missile land in someone's living room because that's better than having a non-stray Shahed in said living room.

            In terms of safety, I bet it'll still beat "cutting open existing munitions and literally duct taping random other fuzes to them", which seems to be the bar for "good enough".

            • Animats 14 hours ago
              Shelf life doesn't matter if you are firing them as quickly as you can make them, especially if you actually can make them as quickly as you need them because they're so simple.

              Right. High-volume users can skip the thermal batteries with decades-long shelf life, and just spot-weld a few AAA batteries inside the weapon. Just stencil the thing "Best if used by DATE". Good for a year or two at least. Skip the anti-corrosion stuff and ship it in consumer-grade shrink wrap. Ukraine ships drones to the field in lightweight cardboard boxes, not rugged weapons containers.

              Many US weapons are really old designs. The Patriot went into production in 1980. The Stinger went into service in 1981. There's been progress since then. Consumer-grade parts can do most of what's needed.

              • dgroshev 13 hours ago
                AAA batteries don't have the current. Li-Ion is too fussy and has a pretty high self-discharge.

                Ukraine can afford the cardboard boxes because they are fighting in their own country. The US has an ocean to cross.

                Ukraine can get away with short shelf life because they are at war right now. The US has to stockpile because the supply chain has to run at some capacity in peace time to be able to ramp up quickly when needed, and discarding the produced ammunition after a year would be incredibly wasteful.

                Neither Ukraine nor Russia can defeat each others' air defence networks. The US has a lot of experience doing just that, while successfully defending against ballistic missiles. High tier capabilities matter.

                The Patriot in 1980 is a very different system from the Patriot that is fielded today. Between PAC-2 and PAC-3, AN/MPQ-65A and LTAMDS it's a cutting edge air defence system. The progress is constantly incorporated.

                The Stinger is a bit old, but mostly because the US doctrine has few uses for it. Regardless, NGSRI is coming.

                • vidarh 2 hours ago
                  > The US has an ocean to cross.

                  But this is exactly the point: This approach allows for insurgents or parties subject to overwhelming but expensive force to strain the logistics and budgets of their opponent. This is something that would be far more costly for the US to counter.

                • bigiain 12 hours ago
                  > AAA batteries don't have the current.

                  Triple As might not, but back in the day plenty of rc planes flew just fine for an hour or three using 4 AA batteries to run the receiver and servos..

            • dgroshev 14 hours ago
              I don't understand your point. Sure, Ukraine can cut a few corners that western militaries are unwilling to cut. They still can't produce a domestic ballistic missile at scale, because it's genuinely hard, and simple terror weapons like Qassams are useless for militaries. "100 rockets for $10k" is off by orders of magnitude.
              • vidarh 1 hour ago
                100 harmful rockets for $10k is off by orders of magnitude, but that was entirely not the point.

                The point is that if you're in a asymmetric position where you can't do much damage directly, then whatever you can do to make the other side waste expensive resources while putting them on constant alert is a win.

                You don't need a warhead, or a viable rocket, to do that. You need something that looks enough like a viable rocket to force a response, because the other side knows that x% are real.

                If that thing is cheap enough for you to fire large numbers of them, you multiply the problem for your opponent. Cheap enough, and you have the potential to overwhelm the capacity of their countermeasures entirely, at which point you increase the chance that some of their real rockets will make it through.

                • dgroshev 55 minutes ago
                  To "look enough" like a missile that can hit something a hundred kilometres away with enough precision to not be ignored you need a missile that can fly a hundred kilometres. This is not cheap.

                  Instead of repeating myself, I'll just link a reply, if you don't mind: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47389309

                  • vidarh 10 minutes ago
                    > a missile that can hit something a hundred kilometres away

                    At no point did I mention "a hundred kilometres away"

              • edmundsauto 14 hours ago
                I think the point is to look at the US requirements compared to the cost and explore ways that a country could gain strategic advantages by building objectively worse products. (But cheaper/faster, gaining an asymmetric advantage in the offense/defense scaling)

                I used to think the US dollars were well spent, because we felt it was morally important to deliver precision strikes which had higher cost requirements. Recent evidence demonstrates that is insufficient when the wetware making the targeting decisions is faulty.

          • regularfry 18 hours ago
            Without necessarily disagreeing with your point, the driving consideration for Raytheon's production line is arguably not reliability. It's being able to charge the customer for perceived reliability. It's very hard to know from the outside how much of it is theatre, even if earnestly arrived at. There are incentives for these things to be expensive.
            • esseph 16 hours ago
              The US military is not "new" at this. There are whole career professions in the military around just this topic.
          • kdheiwns 17 hours ago
            If you think shelf life, QA, safety, blah blah blah matters when a rocket is 100 bucks, I have just three words: you will lose.

            The Ukraine war is being fought with a bunch of cheap toy style drones dropping grenades everywhere. The US got their bases blown to pieces across the Middle East by cheap drones that gently float through the air like a paper airplane in comparison to absolutely any missile.

            And let's not forget. The US had napalm, helicopters, bombers, incredible logistics, cutting edge equipment of all sorts. Vietnam had a bunch of sticks in a hole covered in poop. Those sticks sent Americans crying home and we still get movies and games with them crying about how bad it was.

            In war between great powers, yeah, high tech works because it's scary and civilians don't want to have that kind of stuff coming home. In a war where civilians are being targeted by great powers who terrorize them by blowing up schools and hospitals, a lot of people are thinking about how many weapons they can make to defend their home and for cheap. If America thinks an invasion is a good idea, they're going to be bringing their 50 million dollar tanks face to face with a few $100 toy rockets. And those toy rockets will be picking off tanks like fish in a barrel while a drone streams it in 4K live to the internet. I really do not think American who support current happenings are ready for the absolute mental torment they're going to endure if this continues.

            • smileysteve 15 hours ago
              It's even worse when your goal is commercial viability of carrying a relatively flammable liquid.

              Tankers moving at a slow speed, across a narrow strait.

              They don't have to sink to not be commercially viable; a few deck fires negatively impact your days at sea without incident.

            • philistine 8 hours ago
              The vietcong had some incredible technology, courtesy of Russia. Their fighter planes were breaking the Air Force's back, thanks in large part to their far better doctrine. They had the fabled AK-47, the toy drone of its day.
            • computerdork 16 hours ago
              You have a point - cheap drones have changed warfare - but you might be simplifying the issue. As some warfare experts online have discussed, it isn't that cheap drones are the only weapon that is used in Ukraine (or warfare in general), it is one option in vast array of options based on the situation (although, agreed, it is taking on a much bigger significance). Look at the war in Iran. They did a pretty standard playbook and use stealth jets and cruise missiles to surgically take out air defenses in order to gain air dominance. This would be very difficult with just cheap drones.

              ... but, do agree that cheap weapons are still becoming extremely important. Iran is terrorizing the middle east and strait of hormuz with cheap drones, so they are definitely important. Yeah, in the war of attrition, low cost, high-volume options are clearly very important.

              • jacquesm 10 hours ago
                Bombing stuff is relatively easy, holding territory is not.
              • dgroshev 16 hours ago
                It's fairly important to distinguish what kind of drones are we talking about [1]. Iran's using Group 3 drones.

                The GP is confusing Iran's neighbours not being ready to counter group 3 drones with the drones being inevitably effective. These drones are by necessity large and slow, because they need a lot of energy and aerodynamic efficiency to get their range. That means that they are vulnerable to cheap counters, which Ukraine is demonstrating very convincingly: even though Russia is now launching 800+-drone raids, the vast majority is shot down.

                Even when those drones do get through, they are extremely inefficient. It's not just that they can't carry a heavy or sophisticated payload (more complex warheads are more effective, but way more expensive), the extremely high attrition ratio forces the enemy to try to target way too many drones per aimpoint. Instead of serving a few hundred aimpoints, the 800-strong raid is forced to concentrate on just a few, otherwise most aimpoints will get no hits whatsoever.

                But also the only reason 800-strong raids can even be launched is Ukraine lacking the capability to interdict the launches. 800 group 3 drones have an enormous logistics and manufacturing tail, which a Western force would have no problem destroying way before the raid can be launched. For example, Iran in its current state can't launch such raids. So in practice Iran's neighbours would need to intercept only a handful of drones, which is hardly an insurmountable challenge.

                [1]: https://mwi.westpoint.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/FL1.jpg

                • srean 15 hours ago
                  How resistant are these drones to electronic countermeasures ?
                  • dgroshev 15 hours ago
                    GPS denial is a mixed bag. After about two years of efforts and counter-efforts, the Russians seemingly managed to build GPS receivers that are pretty resistant to jamming.
                • esseph 14 hours ago
                  > Iran's neighbours would need to intercept only a handful of drones, which is hardly an insurmountable challenge.

                  It's a big challenge when you run out of interceptors...

                  • dgroshev 14 hours ago
                    We're absolutely not running out of APKWS. They are manufactured by tens of thousands, and Hydra 70s are even more numerous.
                    • esseph 12 hours ago
                      APKWS is great for certain drone classes, but we don't enough enough launching systems tied to detection and targeting systems fielded.

                      Need more range for larger drones.

            • littlestymaar 16 hours ago
              So much this. Reliability and durability only matters because the thing costs a million dollar a piece. When you have stuff with a mere 5-digits price tag or less, you simply don't care if half of them miss their mark or doesn't fire 10% of the time.
              • dgroshev 15 hours ago
                Half of munitions missing means doubling the logistical burden of delivering the munitions to where they need to be employed. The trucks/plains/ships that carry your munitions need to be fuelled and protected, too, so the expense is super-linear, especially when it's a distant war and not a war fought on the country's own soil, like in Ukraine.

                Cheap munitions sometimes explode before they are launched, killing crews and destroying platforms.

                Cheap munitions mean that CAS is a roulette. You waited for ten minutes for a support fire mission? Sorry, wait for ten more, whatever we launched has failed. Or maybe you're dead because the munition has hit you instead.

                Cheap munitions can pin you down. Those cheap FPV drones that are supposedly cheaper than Javelins require dedicated immobile units to launch and guide to targets. Javelins are organic to infantry squads.

                Cheap munitions are either very expensive or impossible. There's no cheap anti-ballistic missile and no cheap missile that can sink a warship in the Taiwan strait when launched[*] from Guam.

                [*]: alright alright an LRASM would need to be flown closer by an F-35 but the point still stands

                • littlestymaar 3 hours ago
                  > Half of munitions missing means doubling the logistical burden of delivering the munitions to where they need to be employed

                  It means doubling the transport capacity, but not doubling the burden. A bunch of crates carrying 155mm shell (cheap munitions) is much easier logistically than a PAC-3 missile for the same weight.

                  > Cheap munitions sometimes explode before they are launched, killing crews and destroying platforms.

                  Ill designed/manufactured munitions do, but it's not proportional to cost (again, a 155mm shell is a cheap munition even though it's being manufactured and designed in a way to reduce the kind of risk you're talking about).

                  > Cheap munitions mean that CAS is a roulette. You waited for ten minutes for a support fire mission? Sorry, wait for ten more, whatever we launched has failed.

                  That's not how it works. You'd launch two at the same time to take the possibility of failure into account (in fact we already do that with expensive anti-air missiles).

                  > Or maybe you're dead because the munition has hit you instead

                  Every munition can do a blue on blue strike, we mitigate those through engagement rules, which are calibrated by weapon types.

                  > Cheap munitions can pin you down. Those cheap FPV drones that are supposedly cheaper than Javelins require dedicated immobile units to launch and guide to targets.

                  They don't "require" it, it's how they are being employed today in Ukraine. Notice that javelins have pretty much disappeared from the Ukrainian battlefield so it's really not a good comparison.

                  > Cheap munitions are either very expensive or impossible. There's no cheap anti-ballistic missile

                  And it's fine to use an expensive weapon for that reason. Nobody is saying no to all expensive weapons (nukes ain't cheap either).

                  > no cheap missile that can sink a warship in the Taiwan strait when launched[] from Guam. > []: alright alright an LRASM would need to be flown closer by an F-35 but the point still stands

                  A Magura isn't a missile, but it has shown its capability of completely shutting down the Black Sea Fleet.

                  • dgroshev 43 minutes ago
                    > It means doubling the transport capacity, but not doubling the burden

                    Which is my point, doubling the capacity at the end of the spear is more than double the burden. The scale is superlinear. The further out the front is (for the US, it's over at least one ocean), the more superlinear the scaling is.

                    > but it's not proportional to cost

                    You might've heard of the cheap North Korean shells exploding in barrels, destroying Russian howitzers. It is indeed very disproportional, that's why spending severalfold on better shells is a great tradeoff.

                    > You'd launch two at the same time to take the possibility of failure into account

                    It depends on the ability to launch two. Oftentimes it's impossible; cheap FPV drones interfere with each other, or maybe you don't have double the planes to fly CAS.

                    > how they are being employed today in Ukraine

                    It's logistically impossible to employ the kind of drones Ukraine is employing on the go and organically to infantry. Features and CONOPS that enable organic employment lead to a substantial increase in per-unit prices, see Rogue 1.

                    > A Magura isn't a missile, but it has shown its capability of completely shutting down the Black Sea Fleet.

                    It's three Black Seas worth of distance between Guam and the Taiwan strait. On top of that, nowadays those boats are pretty effectively countered. Overindexing on the war in Ukraine would be a mistake.

            • sofixa 13 hours ago
              > The Ukraine war is being fought with a bunch of cheap toy style drones dropping grenades everywhere

              This hasn't been true for 3-4 years now, most of the combat drones being used now are purpose built kamikaze drones. Notably the Russians are using Iranian designed Shahed 136s, while the Ukranians have the similar Liutyi. Among many, many, many other models in various roles.

              > And let's not forget. The US had napalm, helicopters, bombers, incredible logistics, cutting edge equipment of all sorts. Vietnam had a bunch of sticks in a hole covered in poop. Those sticks sent Americans crying home and we still get movies and games with them crying about how bad it was.

              While the Americans absolutely lost in Vietnam really bad, the Vietnamese regular army (PAVN) was extremely well equipped with some of the latest Soviet and Chinese equipment. Hanoi was one of the most densely defended anti-air spaces in the world (because the Americans insisted on trying, again, to kill civiliasn to get them to surrender, which never works), with top notch systems. The PAVN had mechanised batallions with tanks, armoured personnel carriers, anti-tank missiles, even amphibious tanks. The air force also had pretty good quality fighters.

              The VietCong on the other hand was a guerilla force equipped only with light and mobile equipment.

            • dgroshev 16 hours ago
              I'm just not sure what to even say when you're both so assertive and completely wrong. Please stop relying on twitter/reddit to inform your takes.

              The war in Ukraine is being fought with all tiers of systems, ranging from Zircons and PAC-3 on the high end to booby traps on the low end. All of them are essential, and shortcomings on any of the tiers is ruthlessly exploited by the other side. Saying that it's only the small drones that matter betrays over-reliance on the gory FPV kill footage.

              "QA, safety, blah blah blah" get implemented on every level as soon as it's feasible. You can just look at photos from Yelabuga and see how their assembly lines are not fundamentally different from Raytheon's. Ukraine is standardising their drone manufacturing. This is inevitable, because faulty munitions lead to

              - killed friendly soldiers if the munitions explode pre-launch

              - wasted logistic resources if they don't launch

              - wasted time and targeting opportunity or friendly units not getting fire support when they fail after launch

              The cost of faults is severe and much higher than just the cost of the munition itself.

              It seems that you're misinformed about the real cost of modern FPVs used in Ukraine. Reports of sub-$1000 drones are years out of date and heavily relied on salvaged munitions, but there are only so many RPG warheads you can get for "free". Current FPVs are heavier, more capable, and cost a few thousand dollars. Further, it's reported that it takes dozens of FPVs to kill a single "hedgehog tank", which brings the total cost of one kill to a rough parity with "classic", "expensive" systems like the Javelin, except Javelins can be carried by a mobile squad, and launching FPVs requires a dedicated immobile unit with a long logistical tail.

              Don't mistake forces not being ready to counter low-tier threats immediately with the threats being impossible to counter. Group 3 drones are very effectively countered in Ukraine, to the extent that it takes hundreds to deliver maybe a few TLAMs worth of payload to the target. There are mature systems being rolled out right now across western armies, from various gun-based solutions to APKWS. Group 2 drones are decimated with cheap anti-air drones. Group 1 drones are being handled with APSes, which work pretty well even in urban environments, as Israel has (very unfortunately) demonstrated lately.

              • kdheiwns 8 hours ago
                So now they're standardizing it, cool. Would Ukraine still be around if they had not fought defended themselves initially with cheap toy drones and waited until they had 4 years of QA, non-combat testing, verifying shelf life, etc etc?

                The history of war is a nonstop story of armies who consider themselves advanced over investing in old strategies and technology, then being wiped out by a ragtag group of rebels with cheap tools and new techniques beyond the imagination of the "better" military. The natural process is the new tech works, then improves.

                A $100 rocket can easily turn the tide in war. Thinking that means that these $100 rockets will stay as they are and never change is absolutely not the point. Users will continue to refine them while keeping them affordable.

                And if you're in a country that's being bombed nonstop, frankly, losing a few soldiers or having launch failures is meaningless. Having one successful missile out of 20 still has more benefit than 0 missile launch attempts and just waiting around for some "better" tech.

                And while Japan ultimately lost, they effectively used kamikaze attacks where the pilot dies by design in order to terrorize and slow down an invasion. If they told every soldier to just stay on land and hold a gun, it a land invasion would've been more likely and more messy. And by consequence, since the Japanese were so willing to give their life to defend themselves and attempting so would just mean massive deaths on both sides, America avoided invading the mainland entirely and realized just firebombing every inch of the country would be a much cheaper technique that was impossible to defend from. And firebombing worked because it was dropping very cheap and ridiculously large numbers of bombs.

          • vidarh 20 hours ago
            TFA is literally about a $96 rocket.

            > propulsion, warheads, arming and safety, QA, traceability, climate and shelf life stability.

            You're entirely missing the point.

            These do not need to be reliable for the scenario I hinted at. They also do not need to be armed.

            They need to be large enough that if one of them is a higher quality rocket (not part of the $10k) that contains actual explosives, you have serious destruction on your hand. Maybe something that looks large enough for that will drive the cost up and we're talking $20k or even $100k instead of $10k.

            The precise cost is largely irrelevant, as long as the total cost is a tiny fraction of the cost of a missile interception.

            The point is you'd be multiplying the cost assymmetry by forcing a massively outsized response. Because if you don't try to intercept them, every future barrage will include a real rocket. If you do try to intercept them all, you'll be burning through massively expensive interceptors to take out a bunch of cheap toys.

            If I was ever considering an insurgency, or a war, I'd be stocking up on vast quantities of toys, with the intent of making every radar constantly lit up by a number of possible threats.

            • dgroshev 18 hours ago
              > TFA is literally about a $96 rocket

              It's a firework-grade rocket with no payload that can't even ignite reliably.

              To imitate even a TBM or a MBRM, you need similar kinematics, even if you're running without a payload. Maybe your solid rocket motor would be a touch smaller because you're not delivering hundreds of kilograms of explosives, but it still has to be large because of the rocket equation. With a large motor you're looking at a lot of damage if it explodes at the launch point, so you need quality casting. You can't really save much money on the motor.

              Then, you need a TEL. Because the motor is large, the launcher has to be comparable to the real thing. You probably don't want to have two different vehicles, so you keep the same vehicle; it needs to be armed, driven around, and set for launch. Not that different from the real thing.

              So you've done all of that, and then you realise that your empty warheads are too light and the missiles (or warheads, if you split) don't interact with the atmosphere in the same way as non-decoy missiles do. What's worse, modern radars are perfectly capable of noticing that and discriminating the decoys. All of that effort, and you didn't win anything. Might as well add the payload.

              The US and the UK spent vast amount of money chasing exactly your line of reasoning with nuclear warhead decoys. Chevaline is a culmination of the effort, and it's retired for 30 years. In the end, relying on decoys doesn't really work, they are too expensive.

              Fancier CPUs change very little of this calculation, because compute is a very little part of the cost to begin with.

              • vidarh 1 hour ago
                > It's a firework-grade rocket with no payload that can't even ignite reliably.

                Doesn't matter at that cost.

                > To imitate even a TBM or a MBRM, you need similar kinematics, even if you're running without a payload.

                That is relevant in a conflict like Iran at the moment, where the distance that needs to be covered is large. It's not relevant in e.g. an insurgency or the moment you put boots on the ground, where it only needs to look like something potentially explosive coming towards your truck or your helicopter or your people and you have 20 seconds to decide whether to waste munitions on it or not.

              • mosura 14 hours ago
                > The US and the UK spent vast amount of money chasing exactly your line of reasoning with nuclear warhead decoys. Chevaline is a culmination of the effort, and it's retired for 30 years.

                OTOH if you built a successful decoy system that is exactly what you would want people to believe.

          • pjc50 19 hours ago
            > price floor is not dictated by the electronics (which did get cheaper), it's dictated by the rest of the system: propulsion, warheads, arming and safety, QA, traceability, climate and shelf life stability.

            I wonder how much of that Ukraine is bothering with. Or Iran. Certainly Hezbollah are building down to a budget.

            • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
              I wonder how many Hezbollah rocket operators get blown up by their own rockets? A not insignificant number, I suspect.
              • halflife 16 hours ago
                Last week they launched 200 rockets in the span of one day, about 40 of those fell inside Lebanon border, that’s not counting the number of rockets that did not fire at all.
              • coredog64 17 hours ago
                And then as a follow-up question, how many civilians next door to a Hezbollah launch site get blown up by poorly manufactured rockets?
                • WaxProlix 16 hours ago
                  Probably some fraction of the civilians blown up by Israeli terrorist phone strikes and bombing raids; there's a reason Hezbollah maintains some level of support in the region.
            • dgroshev 18 hours ago
              Ukraine does bother with all of that when they can afford it. I'd even say that FPV drones are the main exception, and only because Ukraine was so pressed for immediate results and had stockpiles to repurpose. There are only so many old RPG warheads you can reuse with a detonator made of live wires, and maiming your own launch crews because someone made a tiny wrong movement arming their thirtieth drone of the day under artillery fire gets old fast.

              Hezbollah is a terrorist organisation, they don't need their contraptions to work reliably. GMLRS serves an entirely different purpose to rockets made of repurposed telephone poles, and is much more useful for a military force.

              Also, don't forget the distances. Ukraine is fighting a war in their own country, with direct ground lines of communication to the frontline. On the other hand, you can fit three Ukraines just between Guam and Taiwan.

              • cuu508 16 hours ago
                > maiming your own launch crews because someone made a tiny wrong movement arming their thirtieth drone of the day

                I was thinking about that. Wouldn't you be able to make it so the detonator gets armed by the operator remotely only once in the air and away?

                • dgroshev 16 hours ago
                  That's entirely possible, but doing so reliably and safely is difficult and expensive enough that for a very long time Ukrainians were accepting the risk instead.

                  The risk appetite countries in existential conflicts have is quite different from what we're used to. For example, there are plenty of videos of Ukrainian soldiers angle grinding cluster munitions open to extract submunitions to put on drones, but that's not a strategy that western armies can rely on.

              • Mars008 14 hours ago
                > Hezbollah is a terrorist organisation

                That depends from which side you are looking. From the other side they are patriots and defending their people and land, sacrificing their lives. Looks like in NATO you haven't seen that. The same in Vietnam, Iraq,.. there is a long list of 'terrorists' of this sort. Almost like 'suffering minorities'.

                • dgroshev 14 hours ago
                  It's an objective statement of their tactics, not something relative.

                  Modern precision guided weaponry is meant to selectively destroy military targets. WW2 style strategic bombing was targeting civilian populations mostly trying to disrupt industrial production in support of military action. Randomly firing a few unguided rockets into civilian population centres can't possibly achieve either. The only goal is to provoke terror in the civilian population, therefore it's a terrorist organisation.

                  You can see similar tactics in the "human safari" the Russians are running in several Ukrainian population centres.

      • redgridtactical 20 hours ago
        For a sub-minute flight the drift budget is actually pretty forgiving — a MEMS gyro drifts maybe 1-3 deg/sec, and if you're fusing with accelerometer data you really just need "which way is up" and "am I still pointed at the target." A $5 IMU can hold that for tens of seconds.

        Where you're right is repeatability. Mil-spec works the same on launch 1 and launch 500 across temperature extremes. Consumer MEMS you'd need to characterize each unit individually — fine for a demo, impractical at any scale.

        • nippoo 16 hours ago
          Good $3 MEMS gyros are about 100x better than that now - look at anything new made by Invensense in the past couple years. And their drift is pretty Gaussian-distributed, so the error scales as sqrt(n). If you combine 8+ of them on one board you can get about 5deg/hour stability...
        • regularfry 18 hours ago
          Hm. Is it, though? If what you wanted to do was produce a large batch of calibrated IMUs, building a rig to do so wouldn't be an enormous undertaking.

          Or do you mean to characterise the assembled vehicle?

      • mosura 22 hours ago
        For different definitions of cheap though.

        While the pure gyro/accelerometer stuff does suffer from major problems the improvements in SLAM using just cameras in the last 15 years are insane.

        • redgridtactical 20 hours ago
          Visual SLAM on a rocket would be wild. The frame rates you'd need at those velocities are brutal though — feature tracking falls apart fast when your entire visual field is changing at hundreds of m/s. Drones are the sweet spot where camera-based nav really shines.
        • jacquesm 10 hours ago
          That's because for short term they are really good, for the longer term the drift is too large so you will need many layers of sensors with different characteristics.
      • torginus 20 hours ago
        You can calibrate any sensor, its just a manufacturing step, and while cheap ones may be inaccurate and drift over time, I'm pretty sure the good enough ones (which cost tens of dollars, not fractions of a dollar) are accurate enough to work for the seconds-to-minutes flight time of a rocket like this.
        • jacquesm 10 hours ago
          Seconds, yes. Minutes, not so much. Then you will need another layer.
      • gmerc 22 hours ago
        But do they drift enough to hit girls schools?
      • Mars008 15 hours ago
        Cheap sensors are the future ;) onboard ML can help with signals interpretation.
    • mikkupikku 23 hours ago
      It's not really terribly new actually, in the past, rapid advances in consumer technology have enabled other sort of weapon guidance systems. For instance, the development of extremely compact television cameras available to consumers directly lead to the development of the Walleye television bomb. It happened when one nerdy guy was fucking around with his new camera and realized that he could automatically track track features in an analogue television signal using some quite basic analogue electronics. Point the camera into the general direction of the target and you can then "lock on" to some target feature and based on contrast it could tell how that feature was moving around in the image.

      He implemented a 1D tracker in his garage, took it to work and showed people. A few years later these bombs are taking out bridges and even sometimes hitting moving trucks.

      • jeffbee 20 hours ago
        People made self-guided missiles with 1940s technology, in the 1940s. It can't be too much of a surprise if someone right now can make guided missiles in their garage with 2026 electronics. At this point the "guided" feature is trivial, the "missile" part is doable, and the weapon has probably become the tricky part.
        • dw_arthur 19 hours ago
          Throwing an aside here that anyone interested in 1940s war technology must check out the old BBC documentary The Secret War (1977) which goes into depth on solving the engineering challenges of the war.
          • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
            Well worth a watch. I think I watched it on Youtube.
        • mikkupikku 18 hours ago
          I think the hard part was and will usually continue to be making the whole thing work effectively together with enough performance to actually work in practice. It's a lot of details across a lot of disciplines to get right.
    • shrubble 22 hours ago
      Consumer GPS chips are specifically nerfed for using them in rockets; they give erroneous readings on purpose if altitude is above a certain height and/or if speeds exceed a certain speed. That’s likely why the mid-course correction software uses other methods.
      • bragr 22 hours ago
        The restrictions on GPS prevent ballistic missiles, not MANPADs. Typical limits are 515 m/s and 18,000 meters (try using your phone's GPS on a commercial flight, it works fine near a window). Update rate is probably the biggest issue with GPS and MANPADs.
      • cozzyd 10 hours ago
        The altitude limit by itself is not a problem (just make sure you fix the kinematic model). Consumer u-blox chips work great in balloons
      • nekusar 21 hours ago
        Chinese GPS chips dont have those restrictions.

        I even have 1 that can remove up to 8 active jamming signals.

        Gotta love what you can buy for $20

        • ninjagoo 21 hours ago
          It would be interesting to see if those are only for external sale vs restricted for sale within China.

          If China allows those unrestricted chips to be sold internationally but not domestically it would be a strategic long-term decision, I would think. Destabilize the neighbors but not themselves.

          The more likely reason is that their government has simply not gotten around to restricting it.

      • V99 21 hours ago
        What you are likely thinking of is the "selective availability" system, which intentionally provided slightly inaccurate data to civilian clients, while military receivers could decrypt the most accurate info. But this has not been used for many years now.

        Other than that, GPS is a one-way system, it does not know you exist, how fast your receiver is moving or "give" different information to one client vs another.

        Even if it did, this is essentially a toy and moving slower and lower than a general aviation plane.

        It uses accelerometers and other sensors because they can be sampled and integrated hundreds of times a second. The $5 gps module is 9600 baud serial and provides one update/second (or maybe 5/sec depending on which part number you pick).

        • BenjiWiebe 21 hours ago
          No, he's thinking of the "CoCom limits". It's built into the receiver.
          • ninjagoo 21 hours ago
            There's a lot of room within those 18km/59000ft and 1000kts/1200mph limits.
    • the__alchemist 22 hours ago
      > A few years ago this would have required an IMU that cost more than this entire build.

      Are you sure about this? MEMS IMUs have been popular and cheap for ~10-15 years.

    • danmaz74 21 hours ago
      More than the electronics, I would be curious about the performance of 3d-printed plastic parts on a rocket. Are they strong enough?
      • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
        3d printed PLA and spiral wound cardboard is generally fine for hobby rockets, until they start going supersonic - then you need metal.

        I'm not sure the launch tube could withstand the heat of the rocket exhaust though. Although that might depend what it is printed with.

      • regularfry 18 hours ago
        People have been doing 3d printed model rockets for a while now. With no payload they experience higher acceleration than this will.
    • gos9 16 hours ago
      AI slop comment
      • dzhiurgis 14 hours ago
        Bingo. Against guidelines.
    • FergusArgyll 11 hours ago
      beep boop
    • mothballed 20 hours ago
      Owning a system designed for surface to air weapon carries life imprisonment any USA, without any intent for violence, just simple possession or conspiracy to possess[]. Doesn't even matter if you have an NFA stamp, there is no exception except if it's done with authorization and behalf of the government.

      Merely having a device intended to guide the rocket is also the same penalty.

      [] https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2332g

      • blincoln 17 hours ago
        Seems like the quick fix is to rebrand this from "MANPADS" to "anti-tank", right? Then it would just be a standard destructive device?
  • tzury 21 hours ago
    There are 2 short segments in the video showing the actual performance and thus far it is a complete [1] failure [2].

    The guy has a talent, and he put together a nice prototype based on OpenRocket [3], but with all due respect, this is not a rocket, and you are not going to win any war with this toy, even if all your enemy has are rocks thrown at you from pretty much similar distance.

    The remix of computer games / Ukraine / Martin Luther King / Vietnam / David Koresh just adding more to the amateur spirit and confusion.

    [1] https://youtu.be/DDO2EvXyncE [2] https://youtu.be/DDO2EvXyncE?t=280 [3] https://openrocket.info/

    • daymanstep 21 hours ago
      I'm surprised nobody else has pointed this out. The entire YouTube video has only two short clips of the actual rocket being fired, and in both cases the clips are very short and only show the rocket being fired and then following an erratic flight path, and then get cut before showing the rocket hitting anything.

      For all the technical info given in the video, there is a curious lack of any data regarding the actual accuracy of the system. What percentage of rockets tested managed to hit anything and at what range?

      • simonh 20 hours ago
        I suspect a major problem is the quality and consistency of the propellant and getting a symmetric burn.
      • __MatrixMan__ 20 hours ago
        The video references "future tracking systems," so I don't think it aims at all yet.
      • walterbell 20 hours ago
        > curious lack of any data regarding the actual accuracy of the system

        No lack of entrackment data generated by [edit] d̶i̶g̶i̶t̶a̶l̶ ̶t̶w̶i̶n̶ github repo of "the system".

        • ImPostingOnHN 19 hours ago
          "digital twin"?

          Is there a simulation that has been documented to have the identical behavior and flight characteristics as the real thing? Does not seem like it.

          If there is a difference, it is not a twin.

          • walterbell 18 hours ago
            Thanks for the correction.
    • mikkupikku 21 hours ago
      Yes, I don't think this project is a serious threat as a weapon, it's more interesting if viewed as a politically provocative stunt, to get people thinking about the relationship between technology and war.
      • make3 20 hours ago
        I always wonder why rockets are millions of dollars each, that seems insane to me.
        • runako 19 hours ago
          Part of it is the sophistication. Take the Tomahawk: assumed range of ~1000 miles , estimated accuracy of 30 feet. Can launch from above or below water. Etc.

          The other part is the limited production runs. Until last month, the DoD was generally purchasing ~100 of these annually. There's no scale economy in making these, so those 100 missiles need to support the entire production & R&D of the product.

          • regularfry 18 hours ago
            It's worth reading up on the history of the Sidewinder development for the other side of this coin. Radically cheaper than the conventionally-developed alternatives at the time. It's grown legs in more recent marks but the first few variants were really not sophisticated at all.
          • whamlastxmas 18 hours ago
            I imagine part of it is also zero acceptance for failed launches. It needs to always work
            • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
              Missiles definitely do not always work. I have seen film of a Sea Slug missile (with war head) falling over the side of a Royal Navy ship, without the motor firing properly. Apparently there was a void in the solid propellant.
              • dcrazy 8 hours ago
                And this is why various safety fuzes have been invented :)
        • mikkupikku 20 hours ago
          Check out Joe Barnard's youtube channel BPS.Space where he's documenting his development of "high power" (hobby) rockets. Those are relatively small rockets still but nonetheless he's getting into performance regimes where the engineering starts to be tricky and the details really matter. The more extreme your rocket gets, the difficulty really ramps up quick.
        • dcrazy 19 hours ago
          It’s not a complete explanation, but I was awed by the precision of the shower screens used in modern rocket engines. In the 60s it might have sufficed to just spray fuel into the combustion chamber using some nozzles, but now we have highly precise matrices of micro-perforations that maximize combustion.

          Also if you want to harden the rocket against EMP attacks you need an inertial guidance system, and those things also demand extreme precision.

        • throwup238 18 hours ago
          It really depends on what kind of rocket you’re talking about. An unguided rocket propelled grenade mass produced with 1960s technology is a few hundred bucks. Stepping up to a simple TOW guided missile using 1970s technology quickly ramps that price up to $5-10k per round with a max range of 3-5km.

          Once you add in modern electronics and guidance and reliability that cost quickly skyrockets, going up an order of magnitude at each step of complexity (advanced guided like the Javelin, cruise, ballistic, etc).

        • lukan 20 hours ago
          Fireworks rocket do not cost as much. But if you want high precision and high speed, that simply is expensive. Also the area is of course restricted making it more expensive as most states do not want DIY rockets everywhere.
        • sandworm101 18 hours ago
          They arent. Missiles cost millions. Rockets are cheap. Rockets are unguided. Missiles are guided. From a military perspective, spacelaunch rockets are techically "unguided" as they are not tracking a target but trying to stick to a fixed/programed trajectory. It is the seeker head that costs the millions, all the jamming/counter-jamming tech that drives up development costs.

          This is a rather basic (passive) seeker head by modern standards.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:R-27_missile_homing_head,...

    • vidarh 20 hours ago
      You don't need to win any wars with it if you can use them to sow confusion, obscure the firing of more serious rockets, and/or trigger a sufficiently more expensive response.

      It clearly needs more work, but if an amateur can get this far at this low cost, odds are you'll see attempts at overwhelming attackers or defense systems by sheer volume with cheap decoys like this long before they become an actual threat in and of themselves.

      Get the rocket a bit more stable, and force an attack to try to take out dozens of these because one of them might be a real threat, and you'll have created a problem.

      • jacquesm 20 hours ago
        With a 3D printer and some 'ordinary household chemicals' to quote a certain movie you can do pretty scary stuff.
        • bluescrn 17 hours ago
          People can do very scary things with a knife, a car, or petrol+matches.

          We don't try to regulate those things out of existence like we do with new technology (drones and now 3D printers)

          Kind of ridiculous that a country with more guns than people and 45k firearms deaths per year wants to regulate 3D printed plastic. Yet collecting and shooting actual guns is still an acceptable hobby in many states.

          • tpmoney 15 hours ago
            The same states that want to regulate 3d printers and force you to register them and install only software that will prevent you from printing anything that even looks like a gun part are also the same states that have been trying (or succeeding) in enforcing those same sorts of broad and dubious regulations on firearms too. When you think of states whose legislatures think collecting and shooting guns is an acceptable hobby, California and New York don’t exactly top the list.
          • ricardobeat 13 hours ago
            Can a rocket be used to cut your food, take you to the supermarket or power your car?

            I'm completely against regulation of any sorts on 3D printing, but you have to admit there is a huge difference in purpose there.

          • jacquesm 16 hours ago
            Oh, I totally agree. I always see this as evidence that the terrorism threat is overblown, if it were really as large as we are led to believe the number of successful attacks would be far higher than it is.
        • ge96 19 hours ago
          McGuyver pouring sap on a pinecone

          Hiya! (Grenade)

      • oofbey 19 hours ago
        Exactly. Consider the current conflict in Iran. They have thousands of drones that cost $50k each. The US’s only real defense against one of these drones is to fire a million dollar missile at it. That assymmetry can win or lose a war.
    • f1shy 18 hours ago
      Something far more interesting, you can find in this channel: https://m.youtube.com/@LafayetteSystems
      • avidiax 16 hours ago
        I've been subscribed to this guy for some time. His work is much more impressive, and IIRC, he either works for a defense contractor or is studying for that.

        I think there's lots of people talking past each other on this post. These kinds of designs won't be as reliable as the existing designs, and they may have a systemic flaw, for example, susceptibility to disabling with microwaves. And they aren't going to work after sitting in an ammo depot for 15 years in the desert or after being dropped from a plane.

        But these designs will cost just a few dollars more than the equivalent dumb munition (and can possibly be retrofitted), and can be two orders of magnitude more effective in the short term. The threat here isn't "guy in garage makes MANPADS", it's "IRGC converts 100's of thousands of existing unguided cold-war rockets into guided S2A and S2S missiles for $20 each". Even if it doesn't hit any target, each aircraft has a limited number of countermeasures and has to return to base if they run out or risk being hit.

        Guided munition at a dumb munition price is enough to invalidate many strategies.

    • giantg2 19 hours ago
      "and you are not going to win any war with this toy, even if all your enemy has are rocks thrown at you"

      I don't want to use it for war. I think it would be a pretty cool technical project (if it works).

      • oofbey 19 hours ago
        This design is pretty clearly optimized for weaponry. Eg the foldable fins - necessary if you want to keep a magazine of these things stored compactly before firing. Totally unnecessary for funsies.

        What nonviolent application are you imagining for a gps-guided rocket that is launched by pulling a gun trigger on a hand held mount?

        • giantg2 13 hours ago
          Launching model rockets with a controlled landing (less likelihood of property damage or fires). Learning about the components. Folding fins make it easier to transport without snapping one (hopefully). Trigger vs button launch isn't that big of deal, although might have better safety options compared to standard model rocket launch buttons.
        • blincoln 17 hours ago
          > What nonviolent application are you imagining for a gps-guided rocket that is launched by pulling a gun trigger on a hand held mount?

          A launcher for a climbing rope or grappling hook. Have you ever tried getting a rope up over a branch on a very tall tree?

          Not joking - I considered it as a hobby project years ago until I discovered how hard it would be to do legally.

        • atemerev 19 hours ago
          Ukraine needs more cheap weapons.
    • rancar2 21 hours ago
      Taking a quick look at the BOM, it lacks the correct sensor selection.
      • firesteelrain 21 hours ago
        Even if the correct sensor could be chosen (whatever it is), unlikely is attainable by consumers and the technology would definitely be export controlled in the US.
        • kotaKat 20 hours ago
          You'd be AMAZED what you can find on eBay.

          I saw this pop up alongside its video thumbnail and nearly shit myself watching it and going "damn, that looks exactly like what's on those RU/UA drones going at each other"... https://www.ebay.com/itm/197224214645

          "HS AI Vision Cube For Ultra-long-range Target Recognition tracking & Thermal" for as low as $175. I am feeling the potential ITAR violations straight through my screen.

          • bruckie 18 hours ago
            The funny thing is, at least as I understand it, ITAR only applies to things produced in the United States. As example, you can't buy very good FLIR IR cameras in the United States without a lot of paperwork, but you can trivially buy much better (higher resolution, faster frame rate) and cheaper IR cameras that are produced in China.
          • rdtsc 19 hours ago
            > I am feeling the potential ITAR violations straight through my screen

            And possibly landing on all kinds of watch lists.

            I wouldn’t be surprised if some of the sellers there are just honeypots.

            A name like “Ultra-long-range Target Recognition tracking” just screams “Hey, FBI, please come visit me and ask what I am building in the basement”

          • waffleiron 19 hours ago
            Are items made, located in, and sold from China covered by ITAR?
        • torginus 20 hours ago
          I think MEMS gyroscopes and accelerometers used in consumer drones should be just about good enough to measure orientation and acceleration, and those are cheap and easy to get.

          You could integrate acceleration to get speed - the flight is short enough to make compounding errors easy to ignore.

          I think thanks to drones and RC hobbyists, there's a generally nice body of knowledge on how to get good enough data from consumer hardware to keep things flying.

          • obidee2 19 hours ago
            > You could integrate acceleration to get speed - the flight is short enough to make compounding errors easy to ignore.

            ‘Easy to ignore’ is not a term I would use here, especially given the motion environment of a rocket. It seems like it might be beginning to be borderline possible.

          • the__alchemist 19 hours ago
            > You could integrate acceleration to get speed - the flight is short enough to make compounding errors easy to ignore.

            False, given how noisy MEMS IMUs are, and the accuracy required. Even Ring Laser Gyros drift quickly.

            • torginus 11 hours ago
              I did a bit of googling and this was the first result:

              https://www.h4-lab.com/store/p/qmu102

              This sensor has a 16G limit, which is well above what an amateur rocket cold and the compounding velocity error at 10G would be something like 0.0002 (m/s)/s. Which is way more than good enough, at least for short flights measured in minutes max.

    • slicktux 19 hours ago
      Regardless, he made a prototype rocket enclosure and he seems to have the software down… I think the propulsion system will be the easy part. Hardest part will be tuning the PID so that the rocket goes where he wants it to. Then incorporating his tracking system will be another challenge of itself but that’s because of the form factor. As long as his calculus and linear algebra is good I see than being successful. Either way I’d hire simply to be a prototype engineer. Either Anduril or CIA would hire him in a heartbeat for prototyping.
      • FrojoS 18 hours ago
        > I think the propulsion system will be the easy part.

        Really? I think rocket science is still not easy. Just look at how much nation states are spending on maintaining their liquid and/or solid fuel rocket programs. If they even have one, let alone both.

        This book might give some insights into the why https://library.sciencemadness.org/library/books/ignition.pd...

        Quote: "All this sounds fairly academic and innocuous, but when it is translated into the problem of handling the stuff, the results are horrendous. It is, of course, extremely toxic, but that's the least of the problem. It is hypergolic with every known fuel, and so rapidly hypergolic that no ignition delay has ever been measured. It is also hypergolic with such things as cloth, wood, and test engineers, not to mention asbestos, sand, and water —with which it reacts explosively. It can be It has recently been shown that an argon fluoride, probably ArF2, does exist, but it is unstable except at cryogenic temperatures.

        [...] kept in some of the ordinary structural metals — steel, copper, aluminum, etc. —because of the formation of a thin film of insoluble metal fluoride which protects the bulk of the metal, just as the invisible coat of oxide on aluminum keeps it from burning up in the atmosphere. If, however, this coat is melted or scrubbed off, and has no chance to reform, the operator is confronted with the problem of coping with a metal-fluorine fire. For dealing with this situation, I have always recommended a good pair of running shoes."

        Granted this is about a fuel that is AFAIK not used for MANPADs, but the joke about the running shoes could be made about most aspects of rocket propulsion.

        • slicktux 17 hours ago
          With all do respect I think your over complicating the problem. It’s not rocket science (no pun intended). It’s essentially a hobby rocket that can be weaponized and it’s all DIY. That’s the point simple and off the shelf. Not meant to travel towards the stratosphere or even long range. Quick and dirty way to cause havoc in a localized area.
          • FrojoS 17 hours ago
            Ok. Maybe you are right. I don't know.
    • DivingForGold 21 hours ago
      Get connected with DARPA ASAP, just to let the overlords know you are on "the right side of the fence" - - before Homeland pays you a "very uncomfortable" visit
    • tamimio 21 hours ago
      And that’s ok if it’s failing to do the job as intended, learning is acquired, and it looks fun to build, I am in the field and I find it great homemade concept.

      Realistically, I doubt there’s ANY system out there will be able to counter small weaponized drones that are flown manually let alone with AI, you might have some workarounds, but never a real counter.

      • ninjagoo 21 hours ago
        > Realistically, I doubt there’s ANY system out there will be able to counter small weaponized drones that are flown manually let alone with AI, you might have some workarounds, but never a real counter.

        Weaponized drones (say D_A) can be countered by other weaponized drones (say D_B), equally cheap or cheaper than D_A because the D_A is usually targeting something larger (so more payload) and typically has a longer range. D_B only needs to wreck D_A at a shorter defensive range. That's what Ukraine is doing.

        You can also use drone swarms with coordinated action so that each drone in the swarm is only targeting one other drone, and automatic re-targeting if one node misses. [1]

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarm_robotics

        • maratc 21 hours ago
          > equally cheap or cheaper

          I doubt it, as D_A's target is stationary (and could be reduced to GPS coords) while D_B's target is moving.

          • ninjagoo 20 hours ago
            > I doubt it, as D_A's target is stationary (and could be reduced to GPS coords) while D_B's target is moving.

            It's a good point, though I should point out that GPS denial is assumed in those sort of contexts as a first countermeasure so D_A likely has alternative targeting, and that smaller drones can move faster with less energy storage, which itself requires less weight, compounding the benefits of being smaller.

          • echoangle 19 hours ago
            And also the attacker can send 100 drones without any real targeting at all and 10 proper expensive drones and you need to send up 110 defenders which need to be able to track flying drones. Being the attacker will always be easier.
            • FrojoS 17 hours ago
              The good old "The Bomber always gets through" debate from 1932.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_bomber_will_always_get_thr...

              • thombat 12 hours ago
                He wasn't wrong in that claim: for the most part the bombers did get through, especially at night. The problem was that their effectiveness once "through" was far lower than the bombing proponents had claimed, due in particular to the lack of precision, but also the resilience of both targets and the enemy population.
          • sdenton4 19 hours ago
            However, D_A is moving, while D_B can be stationary.
            • echoangle 19 hours ago
              How is a stationary defense drone going to defend from a incoming attacking drone?
        • tamimio 18 hours ago
          Couldn’t post earlier seems HN is rate limited :/

          hardest issue as I mentioned in another comment is detection. Now on using other drones to counter a drone, there are other issues, as I built and tested some before, assuming you got the detection part done. The first one is guidance and correction mid-air, flying manually won’t really be practical due to the need for an extraordinary flying skills, which can’t be relied on in the field, the second part is the speed, you need to ALWAYS make sure the interceptor is faster to catch it up, third is the weight, I disagree about the payload part you mentioned, I have seen videos of light weight drones failing to wreck bigger ones, if you are relying on collision alone. Additionally, the telemetry/video/C&C for the interceptor, if jamming is already in place, your counter won’t work either.

          The swarm will require a low latency comms link, centralized or decentralized, if the area is jammed, it won’t work. i have built a self-healing decentralized system using cellular in each drone, but that’s useless if the network is down to start with.

          So they might work in a very specific use case, but not an ultimate solution to counter them.

          • ninjagoo 17 hours ago
            While it [1] doesn't talk about swarms, it has some details - $1k - $2.5k price, 170mph speed, backpackable, thermal imaging, radar, ai, manual control (fiber-optic I think, based on other sources and battlefield pictures).

            This [2] talks about swarmer software used by Ukraine.

            $1k-$2.5k gives a lot of room for tech to avoid jamming - ir or visible light, ultrasound, for in-swarm comms.

            And I wonder if the battery itself could be weaponized. We have seen that a very thin layer of the right material can turn phones/pagers very destructive.

            [1] https://www.twz.com/news-features/ukrainian-companies-prohib...

            [2] https://united24media.com/war-in-ukraine/ukrainian-drone-swa...

      • skybrian 21 hours ago
        I don’t know if it will work, but here’s a startup that seems to be building an AI-controlled shotgun:

        https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/9-mothers-corporation

        Given the war in Ukraine, wanting to build such things is certainly understandable. But still, this is the stuff of nightmares.

        • wombatpm 18 hours ago
          David Suaez in Kill Decision had swarms of small single shot drones with the targeting intelligence of ‘00 camera. Identify a face, fly towards it, fire when close. It was an implementation of quantity has a quality all its own.
      • lukan 21 hours ago
        "Realistically, I doubt there’s ANY system out there will be able to counter small weaponized drones that are flown manually "

        Why would lasers not work?

        Those cheap drones are made from plastic, if you have a laser powerful enough and a target guidance system (like a camera and a PI) - then you would just need enough of them.

        • condensedcrab 21 hours ago
          At long distances the small cross section of the drone requires tight focusing (expensive optics) or a high power, preferably pulsed laser (expensive laser) or both.

          Not impossible but many times more expensive than the drone

          • tjoff 21 hours ago
            Expensive is fine since it is reusable.
            • rdtsc 19 hours ago
              At some point it itself becomes a target. It has to be able to get almost 100% kills, otherwise the enemy can swarm it with cheap drones, destroy the expensive installation, then continue as before.
              • tjoff 18 hours ago
                Sure, but it needs many "many times" for that to be a factor.

                And even in the case it could be useful as an addition to or paired with a tank etc.

                • rdtsc 17 hours ago
                  Many times more is about what it comes out to. There are some companies selling laser defense systems but they are many times more than cheap FPV drones with grenades attached.
        • rdtsc 19 hours ago
          At very short distances and with a lot of power, perhaps. Despite what we see in movies laser beams diverge. And then with distance it’s harder to track moving objects precisely to hit the same spot long enough to melt it.

          At that point might as well spend the money to use a kinetic weapon with basic tracking and ballistic calculations.

          • chatmasta 18 hours ago
            Kinetic weapons pose greater risk to bystanders.
        • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
          The practicalities of using lasers are covered in some depth on the Naval Gazing blog. First part here:

          https://www.navalgazing.net/Lasers-at-Sea-Part-1

        • robotresearcher 19 hours ago
          Powerful enough laser and accurate enough targeting system is easy to say, but not easypeasy to do. Dumping thousands of Joules on a tiny moving target is much easier to do with explosives.
        • torginus 20 hours ago
          Lasers imo don't really have IRL advantages over machine guns and rockets, and their line of sight nature is a huge limitation.
          • lukan 20 hours ago
            Laser:

            - are cheap to shoot - do not fall on someones head if they miss (unlike firing bullets and rockets at a drone that will come down again) - do hit the target immediately if aimed right

            Problems with lasers are, cooling, power consumption limiting mobile use - and indeed targeting and fog and clouds.

            • torginus 2 hours ago
              You need about 2 MJ (or 2000 Watt seconds) to boil away 1L of water. The Dragonfire ship class laser puts out 50 KW, so it would take 40 seconds to do that, assuming it can fire without pause, all of the enrgy makes it into the target, and none of it gets reflected.

              This is a container sized system that needs to be mounted on a ship.

              Meanwhile in Ukraine you have auto turrets made from anything ranging from heavy machineguns to old AA guns, with some added optics and/or radar, which are super cheap and you can carry them around in vans.

            • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
              And rain.
        • tamimio 21 hours ago
          Lasers won’t effectively work, it’s a two part equation, detection and targeting. To neutralize a target using a ground-based laser, you need an enormous power, and still it won’t penetrate a high distance/altitude in the sky, environment factors also to be considered. The detection part is even harder, these small 8in drones are almost impossible to detect unless you can hear it, aka it’s over, because they can fly at 250km/h, too small to be visually detected, acoustic sensors will fail to detect them, and radar will miss it as a false negative since it’s the size of a bird. I have seen some systems trying to combine all that to detect them plus AI for flying pattern detection, but they are far from being reliable in practical applications.
          • ndriscoll 20 hours ago
            Unless you mean it just can't detect objects that small, my guess is we'll see things calibrate toward a lot more birds being cooked in active war zones vs drones with explosives being let through.
          • tzury 18 hours ago
            8 inches drone cannot carry much of explosive at all. In order to dump 10 kg load of explosives, you need an “agricultural drone” one that can carry 45kg, since the additional mechanisms and their batteries (and the drone’s backup batteries) are heavy.

            Those are bigger and noisier.

            DJI ARGAS Series are good starting point.

            https://ag.dji.com/mobile

            • tamimio 18 hours ago
              Last week I was flying the argas! But I think you are misunderstanding, these are suicide drones not dropping the payload kind, and 8in can very well carry a deadly explosive, mostly against personnel, vehicles ones you get it bigger but not by much, from 12-18in max.
              • tzury 16 hours ago
                I see.

                Nowadays I fly nothing, but I do see them Iranian drones get intercepted from my porch in Abu Dhabi.

                The fact I am watching it and not panicking anymore tells about how cooked I am.

          • ljlolel 19 hours ago
            Can radar distinguish from the bird since it’s moving 250km/h?
          • lukan 21 hours ago
            The small weaponized drones do not fly 250 km/h.
            • Aspos 20 hours ago
              Yes, but they still approach in just a few seconds.
            • tamimio 18 hours ago
              They can fly at 350kph, check this redbull drone that was used in Olympics, acceleration of 100-300kph in just two seconds faster than any F1 car. Now add a bit of payload and you get the 200-250 speed range, still crazy fast.

              https://www.redbull.com/id-id/worlds-fastest-filming-drone-b...

      • tzury 21 hours ago
        "let alone with AI" what's falling into the AI category here perhaps is the key question, since microseconds counts, and LLM are very slow!

        Even the fastest "real-time" LLM frameworks currently report sub-second latencies around 120ms. This is fine for high-level mission planning (e.g., "fly to the red house") but too slow to prevent a drone from hitting a tree at 50mph (80 KM/h)[1]

        Whilst the Shahed-136 kamikaze drone typically flies at a maximum speed of around 185 km/h (roughly 115 mph or 100 knots).

        [1] https://arxiv.org/html/2602.19534v1 [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HESA_Shahed_136

        • ninjagoo 21 hours ago
          > "let alone with AI" what's falling into the AI category here perhaps is the key question, since microseconds counts, and LLM are very slow!

          LLMs (Large Language Models) are far from the only type of AI around. It's a pretty broad field, and there are real-time AI systems, for example, self-driving cars, which have the response times you're thinking of. [1]

          [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_Intelligence:_A_Mod...

      • torginus 20 hours ago
        From what I can tell, Ukrainians are having some success with converting guns into automatic turrets that can track and shoot down drones via sensors, and the rifle-equivalent of birdshot.
      • danmaz74 21 hours ago
        > Realistically, I doubt there’s ANY system out there will be able to counter small weaponized drones that are flown manually let alone with AI

        What kind of systems are you thinking about? Jet airplanes for sure are completely safe from small drones.

        • chrisweekly 21 hours ago
          "Jet airplanes for sure are completely safe from small drones."

          That feels like a bold and unsupported assertion. Ask a pilot how they'd feel about takeoffs or landings through airspace filled with adversarial drones.

        • 15155 18 hours ago
          A flock of unlucky geese can knock out a jet turbine, how is this a "for sure" conclusion?
        • rdtsc 19 hours ago
          > Jet airplanes for sure are completely safe from small drones.

          Until they land then, due to their cost, they become a very juicy target to aim for.

        • fragmede 21 hours ago
          maybe in the air, but I seem to recall the Ukrainians being successful at attacking Russian planes on the ground.
  • lukan 23 hours ago
    So this is basically a DIY mini rocket clearly advertised to be used in an asymetrical war. I do not expect this project to remain on github for long.
  • niemandhier 22 hours ago
    A certain kind of mind deals with stress by devising solutions, even if one cannot put them into action.

    Seeing people in Israel, Iran, the general Middle East as well as the Ukraine live in fear of drone strikes might have incentivised this person to come up with a potential way to deal with these threats.

    Cheap air defense would equilibrate drone warfare again:

    Currently drones are much cheaper that the systems that take them down.

    • sschueller 22 hours ago
      I would invert that statement.

      The fact that home made drones can cause such havoc to even the best funded military is an equalizer when the military with all the power is actively trying to completely eliminate the otherside.

      There are no home made devices a Gazan can build that can protect from a 2000lbs bomb.

    • mikkupikku 22 hours ago
      MANPADS can be effective against large drones, but definitely not against the kind of FOV shit we see in Ukraine. They were originally designed to kill helicopters and low flying aircraft, and I'm guessing that's still his design intent.
      • niemandhier 21 hours ago
        My understanding is that for the civilians in Ukraine Shaheed style drones are the danger.
        • jacquesm 20 hours ago
          They are but the Ukrainians are making some serious inroads into the effectiveness of those drones and if they keep that up for a little while longer they will have near perfect ability to shoot them down. Essentially they've built hunter-killer drones that are sent off in the general direction of Shahed that then either succeed or fail in their mission. That success rate has been very steadily climbing over the last couple of months.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sting_(drone)

          • koshergweilo 12 hours ago
            Ah that puts into context some of the headlines I've seen about Ukraine making arms deals with other countries.

            https://english.kyodonews.net/articles/-/72301

            It is very odd to see the defense industry live up to its name for once

            • jacquesm 8 hours ago
              Ukraine has been incredibly restrained given the atrocities perpetrated on them. To the point that during the Kursk incursion the residents preferred the Ukrainians over their own countryfolk.
      • Svoka 19 hours ago
        So far russia launched over 57 000 Iranian/inspired shahed drones. They are like 6ft long drones with 40+ lbs payload with couple hundreds of miles of range.

        USA/NATO/allies heavily rely on Patriot AA system. Even if you disregard the prohibitive 100x cost difference, there are about 2500 Patriot compatible PAC missiles.

        This is why gulf states are scrambling to get their hands on cheap alternatives - Ukraine manages to shoot down over 90% of all drones heading their way, usually it is over 400 per day in big waves.

      • tamimio 22 hours ago
        >FOV

        FPV.

        But I really hate the whole weaponization of these FPV drones (as opposed to the bigger fixed wings ones), not just they ruined the fun hobby that a lot enjoy, but also increased the prices for the parts. Before 2022 whenever I talk about drones everyone is enthusiastic about them, what benefits they can bring like drone deliveries and all, after that, you get a hostile reaction or the government putting you on some watchlist.

        • jacquesm 19 hours ago
          You can hate it, but at the same time, without it Ukraine would have been overrun by now and I think that trumps your feelings about your hobby.
          • tamimio 18 hours ago
            That's not true at all, the success rates of these fpv drones are around 1 to 100, ie out of 100 failed attempt you get a hit, but you only see the successful ones, and those aren't my words, this is straight up from a Canadian soldier in Ukraine (1). And you can actually ask any hobbyist, they will tell you how prone to failure/crashes/loss these fpv small drones are, after all, they are meant to be for fun.

            (1) https://youtu.be/K8o4afysnBg?t=766

            • jacquesm 16 hours ago
              I wasn't talking about the success rate for any individual drone, but about the cumulative effect. And the success rate of individual missions depends very strongly on which part of the front you are looking at and what kind of missions are flown.

              Just to give you one figure: estimates are that between 1000 and 1500 Shaheds have been downed by interceptors during last February. That's not a 100% kill rate but it definitely isn't 1% either. And they're getting better every week.

  • randomNumber7 23 hours ago
    > This project manifesto declares a fundamental shift: advanced air-defense capabilities—once locked behind billion-dollar state arsenals and classified labs—are now within reach of determined individuals using consumer electronics, open-source software, and rapid prototyping.

    I guess a lot of people will not be happy with this xD

    • Xmd5a 23 hours ago
      > Description: Space echoes like an immense tomb, yet the stars still burn. Why does the sun take so long to die?
    • pjc50 23 hours ago
      Translation: everyone should be able to shoot down an airliner, not just nations.
      • PowerElectronix 21 hours ago
        I mean, if we already "trust" nations with that power...
  • neatze 22 hours ago
    Many mention ITAR or some other issue, nothing about this project is even close to ITAR (as far I understand), connecting camera to rocket using it as guidance will get in trouble most likely, if not mistake only thing allowed is using camera to AIM at sun.

    https://www.youtube.com/@LafayetteSystems is similar project, also by actual defense contractor, and less opensource.

    • mikkupikku 22 hours ago
      MANPADS are certainly covered by ITAR. It could probably be effectively argued by his lawyers that what he has created isn't truly MANPADS but rather just an edgy toy that superficially resembles a weapon system but isn't actually capable of performing as one. Maybe that would work, but I think his chance of getting dragged into the legal system for this or for some chickenshit like weed possession are very high, particularly if the media at large picks up this story.
      • mothballed 20 hours ago
        https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2332g states that just having a system "intended to launch or guide a rocked or missile described in... [description of MANPAD type rocket]" carries life imprisonment. He calls it a manpad and then shows a system intended to launch it.

        There is no consideration in the law whether he actually plans to use it or ever meant any violence, nor any consideration of whether it violates ITAR.

        As someone who has a lot of interest in weapons law, this is probably about the only kind of weapon that can't be even legally contemplated in the USA, worst case for almost anything else you can get an NFA stamp. The USA is absolutely paranoid about yielding their air power so they come down like a ton of bricks against anyone that might want to defend against that.

        • numpad0 14 hours ago
          The theme is guidance systems. Especially guidance computers. That's the big big big no-no. I'm surprised this still hasn't been taken down and house flashbanged and all.
        • neatze 18 hours ago
          the links says explosives + guidance system, but guidance system still allowed in hobby project as long aim toward sun (eg. sun is the target, same for stabilization), I think having horizontal stabilization hitting an target would be equal to breaking law.
        • charcircuit 20 hours ago
          So design a system for launching test vehicles?
  • mikkupikku 23 hours ago
    Straight up admitting that it's meant to implement MANPADS is certainly a choice, I hope the author doesn't get himself in hot water.. ITAR or something..

    (Would be cool to see an ATGM variant too!)

  • codethief 23 hours ago
    As the YouTube comments say:

    > This guy really wants that defense contract.

    • roysting 22 hours ago
      They may just give it to him to buy him. It’s the first stage of neutralizing the peasantry of rebellious thoughts against the aristocracy.
  • peterus 19 hours ago
    I would suggest using a more modern IMU, the MPU6050 has been long obsoleted both in cost and capability by newer IMUs. I used the ST LSM6DSOX in my rocket flight computers, for example it has a way better rate noise density of 110ug/Sqrt[Hz] at 16g fs compared to the awful 400 ug/Sqrt[Hz] of the MPU6050 and is cheaper than the MPU6050 on LCSC last time I bought some. If you go newer to the LSM6DSV you can get 60ug/Sqrt[Hz] but these aren't as cheap. There was an interesting Sony project which used a synchronized array of these consumer IMUs to achieve lower noise (apparently they became export controlled despite just fusing a bunch of consumer IMUs on one PCB!)

    Nowadays you can even use the LSM6DSV320X which has both a low-g and high-g integrated which basically obsoletes the high-g ADXL375 and saves some space, but it's not quite at the price and supply reliability of the LSM6DSOX since it is less than a year old.

  • isoprophlex 22 hours ago
    This is obviously a missile, and I'm not well-versed in weapons tech, but won't this need a camera to actually track and take out a flying object? So far I just see gps and barometric sensing...

    Also 3D printing and some electronics, ok fine, but where do you get the rocket propellant? That seems at least as critical as the software and sensing side of things...

    • icegreentea2 22 hours ago
      Yeah, this current project uses external sensors (a camera array/grid) for guidance.

      He's using potassium nitrate/sugar as his rocket fuel.

    • amelius 22 hours ago
      Watch the video. He makes his own propellant.
    • tamimio 22 hours ago
      > rocket propellant

      You can homemade it, kno3+sugar

      • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
        You can also blow your hands off, blind yourself and/or burn down the building. So be very careful if you try this. Note it is illegal to make your own solid fuel motors in some countries (you need a special license in the UK).
  • jofzar 22 hours ago
    God, I feel like I am going to be on a list after clicking that link.

    The future is scary

    • nbernard 20 hours ago
      > God, I feel like I am going to be on a list after clicking that link.

      It's a poor life that doesn't put you on a few such lists!

    • roysting 22 hours ago
      What the “government” has in store for you is way scarier. You just don’t know it any more than a cow on a pasture knows what a slaughter house is, yet.
      • realo 22 hours ago
        But in Canada we ...

        Oh shit. You're right.

    • doodlebugging 20 hours ago
      But you get more followers and that's the goal today isn't it? You have to take the good with the bad. No one is categorizing the follower ranks by "good guys" versus "bad guys" so you never know when one of your "admirers" is only there to monitor you in case you get out of line.
  • femto 11 hours ago
    Cheaper than Bruce Simpson's US$5000 cruise missile.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Simpson_(blogger)#DIY_Cr...

    The $5k cruise missile dates from 2003 and was based on a pulse jet, a bit like a GPS guided V-1.

  • kikkia 21 hours ago
    Really cool work on making your own rocket motors.

    I wonder why he calls it a MANPADS (Man portable Air Defense System) It does slightly resemble a Manpads, but with a GPS based guidance system it would not able to be used for air defense, even conceptually. Typically manpads would use something like an infrared/optical or radar guidance system which would run way more than $5. This does seem like a cool home made AGM-176 or similar. There's always been a side project idea in the back of my head about what the cheapest IR or laser guided RC Plane launched rocket would look like. A cheap rocket design powered by some model rocket engines that could be used for a drone -> drone intercept cheaply.

    Awesome job taking a fun idea into reality. It's really impressive to see the design work

  • tzury 23 hours ago
    Given the navigation is done by the cameras (not GPS) you will also need to do some work with the second repository (by the same guy)-

    https://github.com/novatic14/Distributed-Camera-Node-Trackin...

  • holografix 22 hours ago
    Fascinating, is miniaturisation and “democratisation” of offensive capabilities via 3d printing and consumer tech going to impact defensive capabilities as well?

    Are we going to see foot troops carry one of these strapped to their backpacks and launched autonomously to counteract incoming drones?

  • K0balt 19 hours ago
    This isn’t a serious project, in the terms of something that will disrupt warfighting. It’s basically a resume to work as a junior engineer at Anduril.

    Interesting stuff, neat project, nothing new at all here except his multi camera sensing, which isn’t new but his implementation is interesting.

    IDK if maybe it’s a political statement or some kind of obtuse sarcasm, but it seems like he drank way too much of his buzzword cool-aid lol. It’s probably just a job application though.

  • getcrunk 22 hours ago
    I watched a YouTube video the other day about how the usa tracks missle launches globally. I would assume they have to pass a minimum threshold of power/heat/energy to be detectable.

    Let’s all pray this toy project, if readily upgradable, is also trackable and well … the way we keep law and order is by actual policing and prosecuting. So hopefully this doesn’t get out of hand.

    Very impressive, but very troubling.

    • nik282000 21 hours ago
      Right now, today, the US government and it's three letter agencies are being run by a club of human trafficking peodophiles and rapists. Not individual, isolated, crimes. An organized group of very twisted people, having 'immigrants' rounded up and killed, pushing women back into the 1920s, and trying to make anyone who strays from heteronormative a criminal.

      Having some independent developers in the defence market is not necessarily a bad thing.

    • stavros 22 hours ago
      Isn't it obvious that, if one person can do it, many more can do it as well, and probably have? It's not like they'll put it on GitHub.
    • lm28469 22 hours ago
      This thing doesn't do anything a launcher from the 70s couldn't do.

      Global detection is for balistic missiles, not things launched by human portable devices

  • clbrmbr 19 hours ago
    I strongly object to building weapons. It is not right. Raise your consciousness, young hacker.

    I grew up building homemade rocket engines to power model rockets. I even programmed a flight computer in ASM.

    I was always quite risk averse and, then being only shortly after 9/11, I told my friend I worried what we were doing may be illegal or otherwise get us in trouble. So he picked up the phone and called the county fire marshal. My friend explained EXACTLY what we were doing, down to the potassium nitrate and the homemade black powder and nitrocellulose igniters. The fire marshal paused for a long moment and said “it’s not against any law I’m aware of. Just don’t start any fires.” We proceeded to have many successful flights and participated in NERF (a rocketry club that used to get 12kft clearance from FAA before the govt started stonewalling us).

    I feel very fortunate to have grown up in an environment where that was permitted. I fear that my children will not have the same privilege—for many reasons, but one factor is people putting violent things like this on GitHub. Please take it down.

    • swiftcoder 19 hours ago
      > I strongly object to building weapons. It is not right.

      I used to object to building weapons. Now the EU is engaged in a proxy war with Russia, and the US has repeatedly threatening to annex Greenland. Suddenly the need for a domestic weapons supply chain does not seem so farfetched

      • Mars008 13 hours ago
        That's what US constitution is all about. The people should have power more than just voting. When they don't have it it's like EU. Even legitimate candidate can be easily taken out like in Romania. EU leaders prized it. None even said sorry when accusations appeared to be fake and intentionally fabricated. In this case even voting power has been taken from citizens. Nobody can do anything about it. Multi-step voting systems is another example of minimizing citizens' voting powers. And no legal (and illegal) way for armed protests. Very safe total control. In EU it's called 'democracy'. For comparison Putin is also democratically rules for 26 years now. At least that's what their media tells.
    • jjmarr 19 hours ago
      It's impossible to get a job nowadays so new grads will do anything to stick out.

      You don't really understand the desperation we're going through right now. OP wants to be visited by the feds.

    • ryandrake 19 hours ago
      Seems like a one way road--the way things are getting stricter and stricter. My parents did shit when they were growing up that would have landed me in prison, and I did plenty of things growing up that would have landed my kid in prison.

      I fear the next generation is going to grow up confined to a bubble where they're only allowed to stay home and mindlessly consume corporate approved product, never make things, never build things, never destroy things, never hack a computer game, never reverse engineer a wire protocol, never go out and walk around and explore, never race things, never jump off things, never blow things up or burn them down, never protest things or yell at someone, never get into a fistfight, never take physical risks and learn what hurts and what doesn't. In 2050, growing up means just 1. go to church, or 2. watch streaming.

    • ivanjermakov 19 hours ago
      I was suprised seeing american youtube folks building rockets (including orientation and guidance systems) in their free time. In many countries doing this is borderline jail time.
    • atemerev 19 hours ago
      Unbombed people are cute.
      • infinitewars 19 hours ago
        That's why it's so important for people who can hold a moral line, to do so. Violence breeds violence.

        A good engineer in America can afford avoiding weapons work.

        • muyuu 18 hours ago
          it's good work if it helps the right people
          • infinitewars 17 hours ago
            Who are the "right" people to kill? What happens when govt decides to aim your weapons at the "wrong" people?
            • muyuu 15 hours ago
              the people who are invading another country in a war of conquest, for instance

              you seem to believe we live in a world where there no longer are such wars of single-handed aggression

              we don't live in that world

              • steve-atx-7600 14 hours ago
                Right. Not knowing human nature doesn’t mean you won’t be affected by it in ways that you just haven’t thought of or don’t believe could happen to you.
              • infinitewars 14 hours ago
                > a war of conquest

                Israel invading Gaza is kind of proving the point? Those are American weapons bombing civilians.

                • steve-atx-7600 10 hours ago
                  Hamas turned Gaza into a terrorist military installation with tunnels and operatives under and within a heavily populated urban environment. Their civilians were heavily dependent on foreign aid, much of which was used to buy arms and construct the elaborate tunnel system used to stage the Oct attack. If they were in my back yard and I had power and military force, I’d try to minimize civilian casualties but I wouldn’t stop until all of said military infrastructure was completely dismantled. I would prioritize the safety of my own anrmed forces over Gazan civilian casualties. The ideology of those in charge of Gaza and Iran is dedicated to killing Jews and oppressing their own people. I’m not Muslim or Jewish. I just have empathy for Israelis having to live being terrorized constantly while they live in a society that values education, entrepreneurship and freedom. No Jews got into planes to kill Americans. No Jews go out and buy assault rifles and mass shoot American cities. I think there’s a mind virus rooted in Muslim cultures that damns them as well as anyone they are hell bent on terrorizing. Oh, and no Jews killed civilians just because they drew a cartoon of their God.
        • atemerev 17 hours ago
          A moral line is to help the right side with all heart, all mind and all might. If you know any other way to make Russia get off from Ukraine besides tons of cheap weapons - I'm listening. Otherwise, weapons are a necessity.
  • alansaber 23 hours ago
    Kid knows how to advertise
    • amelius 22 hours ago
      Yes to three-letter agencies.
  • hermitcrab 18 hours ago
    Impressive. But:

    -Is a 3D printed assembly really going to withstand the heat of the rocket motor? Or is that going to be replaced with metal?

    -The solid motor grain shown looks pretty janky. I definitely wouldn't want that any near me when it fired, let alone on my shoulder.

  • nine-one-two 20 hours ago
    Check out his code. It’s a joke. His control loop is a naive proportional response that doesnt even account for error let alone interpolate trajectory. Look at rocket.txt and launcher.tx. Especially the “fusion” function. lol. Stay in school kid.
    • awesomeMilou 7 hours ago
      I like to put down peoples achievements to cope too sometimes, though usually not by insulting their code. This kid is likely only able to do what they're doing because their Mom and Dad can afford to buy them the tools (mainly a 3D printer and lots of powertools and other stuff) to live out their hobby like this. I didn't have that as a teen.

      But fuck me dude, even with that, he built a manpad in his garage. Like even if his code is ass, that requires drive!

  • MarkusWandel 21 hours ago
    It still doesn't cease to amaze me what can be done with modern ultra-cheap electronics. $1 for the accelerometer. $17 for four servos. But as DIY cheap weapon development? Only if the ultra-cheap electronics pipeline will keep flowing.
  • remarkEon 5 hours ago
    The kids, in fact, are alright.
  • sy26 16 hours ago
    > Contributors > novatic14 Alisher Khojayev > claude Claude > hobostay Qiaochu Hu

    I wonder how much role Claude plays in enabling the designing/building of it

  • kuberwastaken 22 hours ago
    This is the coolest thing I've seen all week, possibly this month
  • roysting 22 hours ago
    I hope the kid is aware that he better not commit anything even remotely like a crime, because they will try to stitch him up quick.
  • chewbacha 23 hours ago
    Sounds a lot more like a missile than a rocket.
    • mikkupikku 22 hours ago
      The HN headline is very euphemistic, but his own published materials aren't. He's openly saying it's a missile.
  • ramijames 17 hours ago
    Well that doesn't bode well for the coming world war :(
  • colechristensen 19 hours ago
    A word to the wise: don't design weapons and share them publicly on the Internet.
  • moxie1337 12 hours ago
    Can it destroy cruise missiles?
  • quickrefio 19 hours ago
    Very cool project. The combination of 3D printing and low-cost sensors has really changed what's possible for experimental rocketry.
  • systima 22 hours ago
    Impressive! Well done
  • mirekrusin 22 hours ago
    John Connor.
  • fph 22 hours ago
    So basically a homing missile?
  • jokoon 18 hours ago
    the obvious goal of that is to help kill those iranian drones
  • throwaway290 23 hours ago
    Insanity. Airbus fighter jets, open-source rockets on github...
  • stuckkeys 16 hours ago
    That is wild. Entertaining to watch.
  • zoklet-enjoyer 20 hours ago
  • nekusar 21 hours ago
    And what this misses is with his other repo https://github.com/novatic14/Distributed-Camera-Node-Trackin...

    This provides a distributed camera network to provide realtime updatable telemetry for target acquisition.

    Only thing missing is he should have used LoRa as the backend comms. Meshtastic devices provide encryption and full comms with mesh for cheap.

    Thankfully ive already downloaded everything. I suggest you all do the same, cause this repo is getting purged and the student Alisher Khojayev at Los Angeles Valley College is likely going to get black bagged.

  • relaxing 22 hours ago
    I’m waiting for the open source EW project that attacks the uplink. Now that would be a fun competition.

    And then the rocket maker pivot back to control by wire, as in the drone sphere. DIY TOW when?

  • tamimio 22 hours ago
    Glad he’s in the US, I remember reading in Canada few months ago students got criminally charged for building and testing an anti-drone system.
  • MagicMoonlight 23 hours ago
    Be very careful. Google and GitHub will turn you over without hesitation, and everyone who downloads this will probably be vanned.

    Remember kids, the warrantless search is only illegal if they don’t find a surface to air missile. Anything can be made retroactively legal if they find something like this.

  • lightedman 20 hours ago
    Uhhh, as someone who is very much under the thumb of ITAR and EAR as an aerospace employee, this is absolutely asking for prison time, and a LOT of it.
    • stuckkeys 16 hours ago
      Are you afraid this person might be coming for your cake?
  • phplovesong 22 hours ago
    Its scary that you can whip something like this in under 100 bucks. Add a small warhead and you got a small missile.

    Like we see in Iran, with trumps idiotic war the US cant even protect its allies and own soldiers, even with a whopping 1.5 trillion budget.

    • stuckkeys 16 hours ago
      The budget is not the issue...the idiots running things behind that budget are the problem.
  • alexnewman 22 hours ago
    So you are going to see the following cope

    Coper: But it's sensors are so low end it will never be reliable enough. Response: We can use AI to make up for low quality sensors, we can add a camera if we want it to be as reliable as self driving cars for a small amount of money Coper: AI what a joke that doesn't work Response: It's live in production Coper: But you can't fit a big enough payload Response: Lets see

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