
[Digital Today AI Reporter] Thousands of drones sitting in Ukrainian warehouses aren’t out of service because they’re broken. Rapid shifts in electronic warfare (EW) conditions have made key components obsolete, preventing their use on the front lines.
On the 14th (local time), IT outlet TechRadar reported that ReDrone, a drone workshop run by the Sternenko Community Foundation, refurbishes as many as 2,000 drones a month — up to 24,000 a year — and redeploys them to the battlefield.
The core problem is that EW environments are evolving much faster than large government procurement cycles. Governments buy drones in batches of 10,000 to 20,000, but by the time production and delivery are complete, the electromagnetic environment at the front has often already shifted. When an adversary identifies and jams a specific frequency, operators lose the video feed and the unmanned aircraft become effectively “blind.”
Frequencies that were reliable for about six months in 2023 can now become compromised in under three months in some areas. That means many of the drones stacked in warehouses are not damaged; they are older airframes fitted with video transmitters that no longer work in the current EW environment.
ReDrone replaces those outdated transmitters with modules that operate on newer frequency bands less susceptible to jamming. Early on, combat units traded drones informally in unit chat groups, passing units that used jammed frequencies to sectors where those frequencies still functioned. As hundreds of drones began accumulating in unit depots, those informal swaps evolved into organized workshops exchanging obsolete airframes for scarce parts like modern transmitters.
The workshop also tears down low-quality airframes or units with defective fiber-optic coils to salvage working motors, controllers and other components for repairs. Analysts point to weak communication between manufacturers and frontline units as a key issue: after large contract deliveries, if manufacturers don’t absorb timely field feedback, rapidly changing battlefield conditions can render their products obsolete.
The Sternenko Foundation is pressing manufacturers to replace defective drones at no cost. It argues suppliers should sell systems, not just airframes — bundling compatible ground control stations, software updates and ongoing technical support. The foundation says standardizing connectors and frequency-band allocations would let workshops swap transmitters between airframes without fully dismantling the drones, speeding repairs and return-to-service timelines.











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