Крупный российский производитель арматуры для ремонта и строительства воздушных линий электропередач, волоконно-оптических линий связи и структурированных кабельных сетей. Комплексный поставщик в сфере электроснабжения и телекоммуникаций.
Производственных площадей.
Изделий в месяц.
Позиций в серийном производстве.
Станков.
install – это про:
Полный технологический цикл и контроль качества на всех этапах от литья металла до маркировки и упаковки.
Большой ассортимент изделий и материалов в наличие на складе.
Отличные цены и гибкие условия поставки.
Сотни реализованных проектов – это опыт и гарантия экспертного подхода в работе с каждым заказом.
Соответствие российским и международным стандартам.
The "Reverse Art" is not retreat. Retreat implies fear. Reverse Art implies bait .
The following doctrine is extracted from the -KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- field supplement, "Gefechtskehr," dated 1989 (redacted).
Instead of holding a single defensive ridge, tanks utilize multiple successive "hull-down" positions. A tank will fire from behind a ridge, back down completely out of sight to reload, and then move to a secondary reverse slope. This constant repositioning breaks the enemy's targeting cycle and renders counter-battery artillery ineffective.
If you want, I can expand any section into a standalone deep dive (e.g., logistics interdiction methods, urban ambush design, or sensor-deception techniques).
Instantly upon firing, before the smoke clears from the thermal optics, the driver throws the transmission into reverse. The tank slips backward down the slope into complete defilade.
| Orthodox Rule | Reverse Art (KNOCKOUT) | | :--- | :--- | | | Close to Suicide Distance (<400m) | | Hull-Down / Defilade | Turret-Down / Reverse Slope | | Kill the Tank | Kill the Crew’s Will | | Active Protection (APS) | Passive Seduction (PSD) |
This requires what military psychologists call “negative aggression”—the ability to lure, bait, and withdraw without losing unit cohesion. Crews must trust that every reverse move is part of a larger pattern. One panicked truck driver or a single tank that retreats too fast can collapse the entire illusion.
Isolated Soviet T-34s, facing superior German tactics, would often reverse into sunflowers to hide their exhaust. When Panzer IIIs drove past, the Soviets would roll forward out of their reverse hiding spots, shooting the German radiators. The Germans called it Die Umkehrung ("The Inversion").
We must expand the term. A knockout is no longer a catastrophic kill (K-Kill). It is:
Компанией «Инсталл» была произведена и поставлена линейная арматура, узлы крепления и комплектующие для монтажа волоконно-оптических линий связи, общей протяженностью 2000 км.
В течение нескольких лет реализации проекта осуществлена поставка свыше 1 млн. изделий по всей территории РФ на сумму более 200 млн. рублей.
Поставляли и продолжаем поставки арматуры ВОЛС и оптического кабеля. В рамках данного проекта уже поставлено более 500 000 наших изделий.
The "Reverse Art" is not retreat. Retreat implies fear. Reverse Art implies bait .
The following doctrine is extracted from the -KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- field supplement, "Gefechtskehr," dated 1989 (redacted).
Instead of holding a single defensive ridge, tanks utilize multiple successive "hull-down" positions. A tank will fire from behind a ridge, back down completely out of sight to reload, and then move to a secondary reverse slope. This constant repositioning breaks the enemy's targeting cycle and renders counter-battery artillery ineffective. -KNOCKOUT- CLASSIFIED-- The Reverse Art Of Tank Warfare-
If you want, I can expand any section into a standalone deep dive (e.g., logistics interdiction methods, urban ambush design, or sensor-deception techniques).
Instantly upon firing, before the smoke clears from the thermal optics, the driver throws the transmission into reverse. The tank slips backward down the slope into complete defilade. The "Reverse Art" is not retreat
| Orthodox Rule | Reverse Art (KNOCKOUT) | | :--- | :--- | | | Close to Suicide Distance (<400m) | | Hull-Down / Defilade | Turret-Down / Reverse Slope | | Kill the Tank | Kill the Crew’s Will | | Active Protection (APS) | Passive Seduction (PSD) |
This requires what military psychologists call “negative aggression”—the ability to lure, bait, and withdraw without losing unit cohesion. Crews must trust that every reverse move is part of a larger pattern. One panicked truck driver or a single tank that retreats too fast can collapse the entire illusion. The following doctrine is extracted from the -KNOCKOUT-
Isolated Soviet T-34s, facing superior German tactics, would often reverse into sunflowers to hide their exhaust. When Panzer IIIs drove past, the Soviets would roll forward out of their reverse hiding spots, shooting the German radiators. The Germans called it Die Umkehrung ("The Inversion").
We must expand the term. A knockout is no longer a catastrophic kill (K-Kill). It is: