Concerning Ukraine. I am rather surprised Thale or Boeing or Raytheon has yet to develop and RPG rocket with a proximity fuze for exactly this problem. And with a timed self destruct in case of a clear miss.
Russian shoots down a drone... with a shotgun.
https://www.reddit.com/r/UkraineWar...an_soldier_shoots_down_fpv_drone_hunting_him/
And people thought i was an idiot for suggesting a 10 gauge.
You really dont have to do too much damage to make it unbalanced, as they likely arent aerodynamically designed to handle munitions. One rotor might be all it takes to lose functional control
Does this countBB lead shot in a 10 gauge but you would think they could build some specially designed 40mm grenade launcher loads for drones
something that could send a magnetic cloud out about 100 meters would mess with their nav, comms, gyro, and stick to stuff that would throw them off-balance.
well, using a shotgun in a conventional manner requires (a) that you hit the target, and (b) that this happens with enough force to break the target. limited by range, accuracy, etc.
magnetic bits of metal would just require proximity. what would it do? well, presume these things are using flux compasses which would be impacted. ditto the magnetometers that they use for stabilization. also the physical impact of having lifting surfaces compromised.
not science fiction, just science.
i think that weapons have to evolve in warfare. and that munitions have to adapt to what they are being used against. it trying to hit a target at 100 m going 100kmph with little metal balls isn't working then try something else.
i think when the drone operator is trying to remotely fly his weapon into a 1' target at 100+ kmph then even a small impact on his controls, data stream, vehicle stability, etc., might be effective.
i get it that your solution is to field an army of professional-level skeet shooters armed with 500-year old technology against 5-year old technology. good luck with that.
The Chinese are working on that, fear not. Little metal balls are going to be the least of our worries on a go forward. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-infectious-disease-scientist-fired-from-winnipeg-laboratory-surfaces/
Russian soldiers in a Chinese Desertcross ATV are chased by a Ukrainian FPV drone. One shoots at it with a Saiga shotgun, but desn't appear to hit anything. The clip ends before anything is resolved, but it's a good illustration of what it's like to be chased by an FPV from the receiving end.