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  2. Ural Diesel Engine Plant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ural_diesel_engine_plant

    The engine manufacturing facilities of the Kirov Plant in Leningrad [1] and the Kharkov diesel factory 75 (Харьковский дизельный завод №75) [2] were transported to the Ural region of Russia . [1] The factory was in production by August 1941, and produced M-40 aero engines and V-2 engines for tanks.

  3. Blok DM-03 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blok_DM-03

    'Block DM-03', GRAU index: 11S861-03), is a Russian upper stage used as an optional fourth stage on the Proton-M and Angara A5 heavy-lift rockets. Three have been launched, the first in December 2010; [2] the first two launches failed before fourth stage ignition, the first as a result of a problem with the Blok DM's fuel load. [3]

  4. Angara A5 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angara_A5

    Angara A5 (Russian: Ангара-А5), is a Russian expendable heavy lift launch vehicle which consists of one URM-1 core and four URM-1 boosters, a 3.6-metre (12 ft) URM-2 second stage, and an upper stage, either the Briz-M, Blok DM-03 or the KVTK. [2]

  5. List of rocket stages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rocket_stages

    Russia: N1, Proton, Proton-K: Retired Blok DM-03 Russia: Proton-M: Angara A5: In service Blok DM-SL Soviet Union Russia: Zenit-3SL: In service Briz-KM Russia: Rokot: Angara 1.2: In service Briz-M Russia: Proton-K, Proton-M, Angara A5: In service Castor 30 United States: Antares: In service Centaur United States

  6. Blok D - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blok_D

    Blok D (Russian: Блок Д, lit. 'Block D') is an upper stage used on Soviet and later Russian expendable launch systems, including the N1, Proton-K and Zenit. [2]The stage (and its derivatives) has been included in more than 320 launched rockets as of 2015. [3]

  7. List of land mines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_land_mines

    2.16 Former Soviet Union/Russia. 2.17 Sri Lanka. ... CS 42/3 mine; DM-11 mine; DM-21 mine; ... Panssarimiina m/S-40; Panssarimiina m/44; Pappmine; PDM-1 mine; PDM-1M ...

  8. BMD-3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMD-3

    The BMD-3 is no longer in service anymore, with production favouring the BMD-4M and BTR-MDM. [1] In 2016 Russia had only 10 BMD-3 in service, alongside 100 BMD-1, 1000 BMD-2, 42 BMD-4/4M, and 12 BTR-MDM. [6] In 2022, prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russia had approximately 1000 BMD-2, 351 BMD-4M, and 122 BTR-MDM vehicles in active ...

  9. Voronezh radar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voronezh_radar

    Russia claims the radar can detect targets the size of a "football ball" at a distance of 8000 km. [2] Voronezh-VP (77Ya6-VP) works in the meter range and was designed by RTI Mints. The only one built has 6 segments instead of the 3 of the Voronezh-M. [9] A Voronezh-M is claimed to cost 2.85 billion rubles and a Voronezh-DM 4.3 billion rubles. [10]