• Languages
Language (English)
  • Українська (UA)
  • Русский (RU)
  • English (EN)
  • Deutsch (DE)
  • Français (FR)
  • Español (ES)
  • Беларуская (BY)
  • Български (BG)
  • Polska (PL)
  • Čeština (CZ)
  • Slovenský (SK)
  • Lietuvių (LT)
  • Latvijas (LV)
  • Nederlands (NL)
  • Português (PT)
  • Italiano (IT)
  • Svenska (SV)
  • Norsk (NO)
  • Dansk (DK)
  • ქართული (GE)
  • Română (RO)
  • Magyar (HU)
  • Ελληνικά (EL)
  • Deutsch (AT)
  • العربية (AR)
  • Türkçe (TR)
  • Azərbaycan (AZ)
  • Татарча (TAT)
  • 日本語 (JP)
  • 中文 (CN)
  • 한국어 (KR)

    Logo

    support informnapalm
    Navigation
    • Home
    • News & OSINT
      • Donbas
      • Crimea
      • Syria
      • Georgia
      • World
      • Summaries
      • Misc
      • Social review
    • Top Investigations
    • History
    • About Us

    Russian Kredo-M1 Radar System in Olenivka

    on 11/03/2016 | | Donbas | News
    • ru
    • fr
    • de
    • by
    • cz
    • ua
    • pl
    • en
    • bg
    • sv

    Where was a Russian ground surveillance radar system directed to detecting targets? 

    On February 27, 2016, Alexander Vladimirovich Rukavishnikov, a resident of the town of Shakhtarsk, posted a photo of himself on a social website that revealed a Russian Kredo-M1 ground surveillance radar system.

    The last time Alexander visited his page was on February 28, 2016. Starting March 1, there has been a lot of comments posted on his page, such as “[We will] remember you and mourn…”

    The picture was taken on the roof of a tall building. The building belongs to the Cereal Products Plant in the village of Olenivka in Volnovakha Raion, Donetsk Oblast.

    The PSNR-8 Kredo-M1 portable ground surveillance radar system is designed to detect moving targets on the ground or water and to support artillery fire at any time of the day regardless of the season, and also in conditions of low visibility (fog, rain, snow, dust, or smoke). Its specifications are as follows:

    Crew: 2-3.

    Operating frequency range: 2 cm (J).

    Scan zone:

    • range – from 200 m to 32 km;
    • azimuth – from 12° to 180° with an adjustment discrete of 12°;
    • elevation – +/-18 degrees.

    Detection range for moving targets:

    • person – 7-8 km;
    • tank – up to 16 km;
    • truck – up to 32 km;
    • 155 mm shell explosion – up to 5 km.

    Power consumption: 110W.

    Median errors in determining the coordinates:

    • for range: 25 m;
    • for direction: 00–05 m (0.3°).

    Continuous operation time: 24 hrs.

    Weight: 51 kg.

    The photo is an example.

    Radar shows the situation on the electronic map (example below).

    As mentioned above, the scan zone of the Kredo-M1 radar station is up to 32 km. A circle with a center in Olenivka and a radius of 32 km was drawn on the map. The straight line is the approximate direction of observation of the station in the position shown in the photo.

    The surveillance area is in and around the towns of Blahodatne, Olhynka, Buhas, and Volnovakha.

    A roof of the building in Alexander’s photo is an ideal place to conduct ongoing monitoring of the Donetsk – Mariupol (N20) road and all the nearby “gray zone” by using military special equipment. This is not the first time when Russian-separatist forces have used the roof of this building. In August 2015, Russian militants operated an Eleron-3SV drone from the same roof.

    The PSNR-8 Credo-M1 radar was adopted by the Russian army in 2002. It has not been exported to Ukraine, therefore, it could not have been captured from the Ukrainian Armed Forces. It is yet another piece of evidence that Russia supplies arms and equipment to the occupied territory of Ukraine.

    Related articles:

    Russian PSNR-8 Stations Used by Militants in the Donbas  

    Russian PSNR-8M Portable Ground Reconnaissance Station in the Arsenal of Separatists of the DPR

    Database and Video Overview of the Russian Weaponry in the Donbas 

    By Vidal Sorokin

    Translated by Svitlana Kemblowski

    InformNapalm_logo_05(CC BY) Information prepared exclusively for InformNapalm.org, an active link to the authors and our oject is obligatory for any reprint or further use of the material.

    We call on our readers to actively share our publications on social networks. By making investigation materials public, we can turn the tide of information and combat confrontation.

    Tags: Kredo-M1Russian military equipmentRussian Radar System

    Recent Posts

    • Andriy Derkach and his tapes. About one special operation to interfere in the US presidential election

      08/10/2020 - 0 Comment
    • The battle for people and identity. How Ukraine can undermine Russia’s imperial paradigm from within

      05/19/2026 - 0 Comment
    • “Victory Day”: Between Memory and Myth

      05/14/2026 - 0 Comment
    • Walking the Path of Fire: Twelve Years of InformNapalm’s War Against the Kremlin

      05/11/2026 - 0 Comment

    Related Posts

    • OSCE spots 15 newest Russian UAZ Esaul armored vehicles in Donbas (Drone photo)

      05/03/2021 - 0 Comment
    • Another Russian FSB drone crashed in Donbas

      03/12/2021 - 0 Comment
    • Russian army shows how it trains to violate international humanitarian law

      03/05/2021 - 0 Comment

    No Responses to “Russian Kredo-M1 Radar System in Olenivka”

    Leave a Reply Cancel Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


    *
    *

    Follow us on social media
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    © 2014-2019. «InformNapalm». CC BY 4.0