Ukraine’s DIY drone makers assist fighters on entrance strains : NPR

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Oleh Halaidych, 34, scientist, documentary filmmaker, volunteer solder fpv dron in workshop in Kyiv on March 21, 2025

Biophysicist Oleh Halaidych, 34, helps make drones at a workshop in Kyiv. “I believe we’re all motivated as a result of we see that it is a low cost and accessible technique to make weapons,” he says. “They kill the enemy and destroy his armored autos.”

Anton Shtuka for NPR


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Anton Shtuka for NPR

KYIV, Ukraine — Within the courtyard of a bunch of ordinary-looking Kyiv condo blocks, a stairway leads right down to a small basement condo.

Three huge canine run out into the hallway when newcomers arrive. Inside a fundamental room, three individuals sit hunched over desks. Round them, tables are laden with elements and small hand instruments like pliers and tweezers. Packing containers of tiny plastic propellers sit on the ground and wall cabinets are stacked with carbon-fiber frames.  

That is the workshop for a secret drone-making operation. It seems about 100 assault drones for Ukraine’s army each month.

Andrii Yukhno, who supervises this operation, reaches as much as shut one of many home windows. They’re lined with paper to dam prying eyes. With the home windows cracked open, kids’s voices from a close-by kindergarten fill the room. “However don’t be concerned,” he says, “we do not present our drones to the kids.”

Earlier than Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Yukhno earned his dwelling as a barista in a espresso store. However he says the battle turned him right into a full-time volunteer in one of many many DIY weapons factories arming the fighters on Ukraine’s entrance strains.

Earlier, he supported the battle effort in a different way.

Andrii Yukhno, 31, fpv engineer in "Klyn drones" workshop in Kyiv on March 21, 2025.

Andrii Yukhno, 31, a former barista, manages a drone-making workshop in Kyiv.

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“To start with I used to be delivering meals and drugs to individuals in Kyiv, something to assist,” he says. “However then I moved on to larger and larger issues.”

He took on-line drone-making courses — there are a number of supplied in Ukraine — and began making first-person view (FPV) drones on this basement condo.

These are manually piloted unmanned aerial autos. On the entrance strains, they’re outfitted with a high-explosive payload the drone makers check with as “sweet.”

Operators, sporting goggles with moveable screens strapped round their heads to point out a livestream view from the drone’s digital camera, fly the drones into fight. They steer the drones straight into enemy targets — autos, trenches, personnel, even tanks — to destroy them with explosives.

Yukhno is now coaching others. One in every of his trainees is 35-year previous Khrystyna Pashchenko, who arrived right here a few weeks in the past.

“Andrii praised my work, so I am already soldering the engines to the motherboard,” she says.

Pashenko says she’s good at consideration to element. She used to get pleasure from cross-stitch as a interest.

Khrystyna Pashchenko, 32, unemployed, volunteer of "Klyn drones" workshop.

Khrystyna Pashchenko, 32, left her job with a web agency to assist the battle effort, although it means she now receives no pay.

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Immediately, as a substitute of working with needle and thread, she holds a soldering wand puffing out skinny wisps of smoke. She lately left her job as a supervisor in an organization that helped companies seem larger in web searches. She earns nothing now as a volunteer, however says that when the battle began, her previous work now not felt significant.

“However now I really feel tremendous excited and a bit bit happy with myself that I can do one thing helpful,” she says. “That I will help within the battle effort. And the blokes who’re utilizing our drones on the entrance strains ship us movies saying how grateful they’re, and that is massively motivating.”

Factories and mom-and-pop operations churn out drones

The battle in Ukraine is now largely being fought with drones, with greater than half the destruction on the entrance line attributable to FPV drones, in keeping with the Ukrainian normal workers. Ukraine is on the chopping fringe of drone innovation however lags behind Russia in drone manufacturing, specialists say.

Necessity has reworked this nation right into a nation of drone-makers, who churn them out from manufacturing facility meeting strains and mom-and-pop operations just like the one within the basement condo in Kyiv.

Yukhno says he is aware of of a minimum of 15 like his in Kyiv alone.

Fpv engineers Oleksandr Ptashnyk (left) and Andrii Yukhno (right) in the FPV workshop "Klyn drones."

Drone makers Oleksandr Ptashnyk (left) and Andrii Yukhno of their workshop. Ptashnyk, a dancer, says he is making drones to assist Ukraine finish this battle on the very best phrases it might probably.

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For Sasha Ptashnyk, who was a dancer earlier than the full-scale invasion, making drones is a approach to assist finish this battle on the very best phrases Ukraine can get.

“After all I’d love for us to be victorious and get all our land again,” he says. “However we’ve to be extra practical. We’re preventing an enormous foe. We have to be sober.”

What’s most sobering, he says, is that Ukraine’s biggest ally, america, could also be abandoning his nation. Ukrainians have felt surprised by the Trump administration’s turnabout on Ukraine. They watched as their very own president was berated and accused of being ungrateful in late February within the Oval Workplace, and see President Trump as cozying as much as Russian President Vladimir Putin as he pushes to finish the battle.

Fpv drones in the FPV workshop "Klyn drones."

A stack of carbon fiber drone frames able to be loaded up with engines, cameras and transmitters.

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Ukraine and Russia are competing with one another in drone expertise

A 30-minute drive away from the improvised weapons workshop, the sharp whine of a drone’s 4 motors cuts by the nation air. Oleksii Babenko is testing one among his firm’s new drones in a discipline surrounded by forest on the outskirts of Kyiv.

Babenko is the CEO of one among Ukraine’s most profitable drone-making firms, Vyriy. It lately reached a milestone: it’s now turning out drones made solely of Ukrainian-sourced elements — from the carbon-fiber frames to the intricately mounted motors and cameras.

Babenko says that is essential at a time when Ukraine has to more and more depend on itself.

Serhii, head of Vyriy production company operating fpv drone on testing field in Kyiv on 21 March 21, 2025.

Oleksii Babenko, the CEO of Vyriy drones, take a look at flies one among his drones in a discipline outdoors Kyiv. His firm lately introduced that its drones are 100% made in Ukraine.

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“From the beginning of this battle, each time Ukraine wants one thing, we’ve to ask different nations for it again and again,” he says. “So the one technique to keep sturdy is to make all the pieces right here. Ukrainian troopers, Ukrainian producers…”

The whereabouts of Vyriy’s manufacturing facility are a carefully guarded secret, as a result of Russia tries to focus on Ukraine’s drone-making operations. However Babenko lets NPR watch a drone take a look at on a current sunny afternoon.

Daylight glints off what appears like fishing wire strewn by the timber and bushes. It’s, in reality, fiber optic cable — a whole bunch of yards of it — spooled out by the drone, transmitting management alerts and video feeds between the operator and the flying machine. The system is not possible to jam with blasts of radio waves, a standard counter-measure within the discipline.

Babenco says Ukraine made this breakthrough in 2023. However Russia shortly caught up.

Team member of Vyriy production copmany preparing fpv drone for flight at a testing field in Kyiv.

A Vyriy drone is ready for a take a look at flight at a discipline outdoors Kyiv.

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Oleksandr Kamyshin, an advisor to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on strategic affairs, estimates that Russia is, more often than not, a number of months behind Ukraine in drone innovation. However he says the Russians have a lot greater manufacturing capabilities. So he calls this battle a technological race.

“As soon as you’ve got acquired a expertise, the opposite aspect tries to counter this expertise,” he tells NPR. “After which you need to discover one other resolution and the opposite aspect tries to counter that. Throughout the battle is a continuing battle of improvements and applied sciences.”

He says Ukraine is able to producing as much as 5 million FPV drones per yr and has greater than 150 producers that may produce as much as 100,000 drones per thirty days.

Serhii (right), head of Vyriy production company operating fpv drone on Testing field in Kyiv.

Vyriy CEO Oleksii Babenko (proper), with a colleague, wears drone goggles to fly one among his drones in a apply discipline.

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Volunteers have left their fields of experience for now to make drones

Again within the basement condo in Kyiv, a drone whirs furiously within the heart of the room as it’s examined in a steel cylindrical body that enables it to fly, twist and flip.

Half-time drone maker Oleh Halaidych has simply proven up and sits down at his workstation. This biophysicist, who has a Ph.D. within the examine of stem cells, says making drones might be the quickest, most impactful approach of serving to Ukraine.

“I believe we’re all motivated as a result of we see that it is a low cost and accessible technique to make weapons,” he says. “They kill the enemy and destroy his armored autos.”

Halaidych says the battle has made many individuals who work in tradition or the humanities and sciences notice that it is a time to pursue totally different choices.

“Science is sluggish,” he says. “And we have to do one thing to guard ourselves proper now.”

Oleh Halaidych, 34, scientist, documentary filmmaker, volunteer solder fpv dron in "Klyn drones" workshop.

Oleh Halaidych at work in a Kyiv drone workshop.

Anton Shtuka for NPR


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Anton Shtuka for NPR

Kateryna Malofieieva contributed reporting to this story.

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