Omsktransmash takes part in military TV show
12 October 2015 (09:20)
UrBC, Omsk, October 12, 2015. Bridge-layers MTU 90M and TMM6, engineering vehicles manufactured by Omsktransmash (a member enterprise of Ural Vagon Zavod Corporation) were featured in Russian Defense Ministry Zvezda Channel’s military show dedicated to the ways engineering vehicles are used in the Russian Armed Forces, the corporation’s press service reports.
Most of the camera work took place at the plant, on the specially prepared test site, and on a country pond. Author and presenter Alexei Yegorov, cameramen Ivan Yelovykh and Dmitri Bukharov, and producer Maria Stremina tried to present the vehicles’ full potential and prove they can be used for all sorts of purposes.
During the shooting, the TV team interviewed testers, developers, and defense procurement experts, who gave a full account of the bridge-layers’ performance characteristics. The two vehicles were made to reach across a water obstacle simultaneously to demonstrate their synergizing potential.
Ural Vagon Zavod Corporation’s other new product, the T14 tank, was featured in one of the earlier show runs called Armata – Terra Incognita. This episode got viewed by hundreds of thousands of Internet users in three weeks.
Most of the camera work took place at the plant, on the specially prepared test site, and on a country pond. Author and presenter Alexei Yegorov, cameramen Ivan Yelovykh and Dmitri Bukharov, and producer Maria Stremina tried to present the vehicles’ full potential and prove they can be used for all sorts of purposes.
During the shooting, the TV team interviewed testers, developers, and defense procurement experts, who gave a full account of the bridge-layers’ performance characteristics. The two vehicles were made to reach across a water obstacle simultaneously to demonstrate their synergizing potential.
Ural Vagon Zavod Corporation’s other new product, the T14 tank, was featured in one of the earlier show runs called Armata – Terra Incognita. This episode got viewed by hundreds of thousands of Internet users in three weeks.
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