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Cybersecurity Infrastructure

Russian-made Shahed drones reportedly disintegrating mid-air due to manufacturing defects

A Russian Shahed drone shot down by Ukraine Image: Primary
Russian-produced Shahed drones are experiencing severe quality control issues, with some reportedly disintegrating in mid-air before reaching their targets due to manufacturing defects and supply chain problems. Video footage captured The quality issues appear to stem from problems at Russia's Alabuga Special Economic Zone in Tatarstan, where most Shahed drones are manufactured. According to defense analysts, factories operate around the clock with minimally trained personnel, many of whom are reportedly young imported workers who have been "lured or trapped" into positions at these facilities. Production pressures to meet volume targets have reportedly led factories to use whatever "inferior" Chinese components they can obtain, exacerbating quality problems. These manufacturing challenges coincide with Ukrainian efforts to target known drone production and storage facilities using long-range weaponry. Defense-Blog reports a sustained decline in Shahed drone strike effectiveness beginning in October 2025, with the trend continuing through recent observations. Analysts conclude that quality control has effectively collapsed, transforming the drones from precision weapons into "tools of attrition" intended for mass deployment rather than accuracy. The degradation in drone quality comes as Russia continues its drone assault campaign against Ukraine, though with apparently diminishing effectiveness due to these manufacturing and supply chain issues.
Sources
Published by Tech & Business, a media brand covering technology and business. This story was sourced from Tom's Hardware and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.