Patron & SteelEcho
Patron Patron
SteelEcho, let’s talk about how to set up a solid perimeter that keeps surprise attacks at bay. I’ve got a few ideas for guard post placement that give us redundancy and clear lines of sight.
SteelEcho SteelEcho
For a perimeter you need three layers: outer, middle, and inner. Place guard posts at the corners and every 100 meters along the fence line; that gives overlapping fields of view. Assign each post a primary and a backup post within 50 meters so if one goes silent the other picks up immediately. Keep the cameras and radios on a 2‑hour backup battery and a spare battery pack at each post. Mark the high‑risk spots with a double‑layered fence and a 5‑meter drop. That redundancy makes a surprise attack a bad bet.
Patron Patron
Looks solid. Stick to those 100‑meter intervals and make sure the backup posts can see the same sectors. That way if a guard falls the next one is already in position. Keep the batteries charged and the fences reinforced. A good plan, keeps everyone safe.
SteelEcho SteelEcho
Good. Stick to the 100‑meter grid, double‑check overlapping sight lines, and keep the backup posts 50 meters apart. Charge batteries twice a day, log every post’s status, and reinforce the fences where the enemy might try a breach. Simple, repeatable, no surprises.
Patron Patron
Sounds like a plan. I’ll make sure the grid stays tight and the logs stay clean. No surprises.
SteelEcho SteelEcho
Nice. Keep the grid tight, the logs clean, and the batteries full. No surprises.
Patron Patron
Got it. Stay sharp.