TechFire at Omsk tank factory ignites concerns over Russian war capacity

Fire at Omsk tank factory ignites concerns over Russian war capacity

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Images source: © Telegram, x.com
Przemysław Juraszek

13 September 2024 06:56

Omsktransmash Plants is the second tank factory in Russia after Nizhny Tagil, belonging to the Uralvagonzavod conglomerate. In Omsk, T-80 family tanks are repaired or rebuilt, and heavy TOS-1A flamethrowers and 2S19 "Msta-S" howitzers are produced. We present the performance of these machines.

The fire broke out on 12 September at the Omsktransmash factory, and according to the Russians, the cause was repair work being conducted by an external company. According to Omsktransmash's statement, the fire was not supposed to affect the production process, and there were no casualties. Whether this was indeed the case will be revealed when photos from the site emerge.

Here is what Omsktransmash produces — critical equipment for the Russians

Due to losses suffered during the war in Ukraine, the Russians are pulling out whatever they can from "strategic junkyards." However, it turned out that the condition of post-Soviet equipment from these stockpiles varies, and in recent years, the Russians have been heavily pulling out not T-72 tanks, which they theoretically had more of, but T-80s. The Ukrainians recently captured Russian tanks in the Kursk region and admitted that the T-80BWM and T-90M are in much better condition than the T-72 models.

One can assume that the less popular family of machines worldwide was simply less pilfered over the last decades and was in a state suitable for faster restoration to combat readiness. The group Covert Cabal, which analyses Russian stockpiles based on satellite images, estimated that out of about 1,200-1,600 units of T-80B/BW from before the war, fewer than 300 visible units remained for Russia by mid-2024.

The Russians are massively rebuilding these machines to the T-80BWM standard, making them one of the most dangerous tanks Ukrainians could encounter. Without even reasonably modern tanks, conducting an offensive is impossible, and the Russians know this, too.

The T-80BWM tanks, produced since 2017, are rebuilds of older machines, where beyond general overhauls, a new fire control system with a thermal sight is installed, the loading automation is adapted for longer shells, and a heavy two-layer reactive Relikt armour is placed on the main tank armour, protecting tandem warhead ammunition.

Moreover, starting in 2023, drone jammers and "roofs" were added to protect against bomblets or PG-7VL grenades dropped from drones like the "Baba Yaga". Overall, the T-80BWM tanks are durable machines capable of surviving several hits from FPV drones, provided they do not hit several critical spots, causing the ammunition storage to explode.

Additionally, the Omsk plants produce heavy flamethrowers TOS-1A, which are rocket launchers containing 45 kg of thermobaric explosive material. Unlike classic explosive charges, this is much more deadly, especially in built-up areas or fortifications. Besides the classic explosion effects, a vacuum and pressure spikes occur in the impact zone, tearing internal organs.