Russians use universal planning and correction modules to drop bombs on Ukraine. Specialists of Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise showed and told journalists of UNN what this module looks like and what are the features of its design.
KFI experts note that recently the enemy has been increasingly using universal planning and correction modules (UPCMs) for bomb attacks on Ukraine.
"This is a cheap, concrete way to use aircraft bombs in order to avoid entering our territory on the line of contact and dropping aircraft bombs on our troops, civilians, cities and villages," said Andriy Kulchytskyi, head of the Military Research Laboratory of the Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise.
The expert notes that the modules have a fairly simple design and use foreign-made microelectronics.
"Eight-channel antenna, control system. Servos from a well-known Chinese company. You can see that all the chips are lasered off so that it is impossible to identify the manufacturer. The bomb is attached to the module and becomes a planning munition," Kulchytskyi says.
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Earlier, KFI experts toldwhy the enemy began to use guided aerial bombs more often to attack Ukraine.
"Missiles and Shahideen are relatively limited and more materially expensive weapons for the enemy. They are systematically trying to replenish their stocks in various ways, but in general, it is a matter of producing them from scratch. At the same time, the Russians have accumulated tens of thousands of aircraft bombs in their warehouses that can be used to equip frontline aircraft," the experts noted.