Soldiers of the 1430th regiment in this laboratory assemble drones and ammunition for them around the clock on 3D printers.

"I became interested in explosives professionally while still in my military service. It was quite a long time ago, I am the most ancient warrior we have," the fighter said.

The workshop appeared thanks to the commander of the regiment with the call sign Uchitel. He gathered around him a group of specialists charged with results.

The filling for kamikaze drones and shells is made by Andritsa's interlocutor himself, a veteran of the Chechen campaign.

He showed how he was able to strengthen the VOG-17 with additional parts, and also said that the fighters "get a very dense fragmentation field."

"Tests have shown that even 3.5-4 meters from the point of detonation, a life-size figure receives three or four hits," he said.

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