Satellitenbilder zeigen den Schaden an der Mikroelektronikfabrik „Silicon El“ in der Stadt Brjansk, nachdem sie gestern von sieben ukrainischen Sturmschatten-Marschflugkörpern getroffen wurde
Satellitenbilder zeigen den Schaden an der Mikroelektronikfabrik „Silicon El“ in der Stadt Brjansk, nachdem sie gestern von sieben ukrainischen Sturmschatten-Marschflugkörpern getroffen wurde
Those places need to be ultra clean to make their stuff. Looks like it’ll be out of action for some time hopefully.
Large_Library_551 on
Bye bye clean room
Physical-Cut-2334 on
This is good for multiple reasons.
Getting replacement machinery to produce semiconductors and microchips is no easy task given the conditions the Russian state currently finds itself in. On top of that, a replacement workforce needs to be trained, which takes time and money, and that’s assuming they can even be trained on destroyed machinery or from manuals alone. Then there are the dead workers themselves, meaning replacements need to be sourced, brought in, and integrated, all of which is expensive and slow.
The obvious part: the building is gone, and a new sterile facility needs to be constructed from scratch, expensive, and it will take a while. Meanwhile, with production down, existing stocks will gradually be depleted (assuming they weren’t stored at the facility and destroyed along with it), forcing them to be more selective about what they target.
If production can’t be rebuilt, buyers will need to find alternative suppliers who may not match the same quality, and that’s assuming those suppliers even produce the same microchip or semiconductor, which they might not. And to top it all off, any rebuilt facility would need to be placed out of Ukrainian range, beyond 3,000 km and across the Ural mountains, which on its own is a logistical and financial nightmare.
Frosty_Choice_3416 on
It was rusty anyway.
Blackintosh on
I forsee Putin ordering more schools and playgrounds to be targeted. This is a massive loss for Russia.
m4jsterk0 on
nice.. this is not just some drone hit that can be fixed in a week …
this is structural
pls more of this 🙂
WotTheFook on
That is all of the fucked. No new parts coming from there…
The_Bad_Man_ on
The site even looks like a silicone chip.
Next_Conference1691 on
All our love from the UK.
More gifts coming soon.
Shadow_Lunatale on
Oh how lovely, the AFU put a creeper face onto the roof as well. Beeing effective and funny at the same time.
NoIndependent9192 on
Pretty comprehensive damage, did the workforce get hit too?
Naughteus_Maximus on
What about the booms that happened away from the main site? There seemed to be at least 2, a few hundred metres away. Were those misses or did they also hit something connected with this factory?
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Simply amazed by how quick the public can get new satellite imagery.
From [AMK_Mapping](https://x.com/AMK_Mapping_/status/2031719601894310280)
Those places need to be ultra clean to make their stuff. Looks like it’ll be out of action for some time hopefully.
Bye bye clean room
This is good for multiple reasons.
Getting replacement machinery to produce semiconductors and microchips is no easy task given the conditions the Russian state currently finds itself in. On top of that, a replacement workforce needs to be trained, which takes time and money, and that’s assuming they can even be trained on destroyed machinery or from manuals alone. Then there are the dead workers themselves, meaning replacements need to be sourced, brought in, and integrated, all of which is expensive and slow.
The obvious part: the building is gone, and a new sterile facility needs to be constructed from scratch, expensive, and it will take a while. Meanwhile, with production down, existing stocks will gradually be depleted (assuming they weren’t stored at the facility and destroyed along with it), forcing them to be more selective about what they target.
If production can’t be rebuilt, buyers will need to find alternative suppliers who may not match the same quality, and that’s assuming those suppliers even produce the same microchip or semiconductor, which they might not. And to top it all off, any rebuilt facility would need to be placed out of Ukrainian range, beyond 3,000 km and across the Ural mountains, which on its own is a logistical and financial nightmare.
It was rusty anyway.
I forsee Putin ordering more schools and playgrounds to be targeted. This is a massive loss for Russia.
nice.. this is not just some drone hit that can be fixed in a week …
this is structural
pls more of this 🙂
That is all of the fucked. No new parts coming from there…
The site even looks like a silicone chip.
All our love from the UK.
More gifts coming soon.
Oh how lovely, the AFU put a creeper face onto the roof as well. Beeing effective and funny at the same time.
Pretty comprehensive damage, did the workforce get hit too?
What about the booms that happened away from the main site? There seemed to be at least 2, a few hundred metres away. Were those misses or did they also hit something connected with this factory?