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What is this "we" stuff?


Mickey

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I think the term bullet proof armor is a bit deceptive.  The Interceptor flak (a hybrid of the old ranger body armor) is what rangers and special forces wear.  The problem with it is it can only stop 9mm and 44 rounds.  It can NOT stop a 7.62 round being shot out of an AK47 or Russian SKS.  Basically it can stop pea shooters but not the rifles the terrorist are using.

 

A few months ago I was shooting off rounds with an AK-47.  My buddy had a half inch steel plate and wanted to see if we could shoot through it.  From the distance of 20 meters, the AK-47 shot clean through it.

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detox,

 

Not entirely true. My understanding of the "new" body armor is the plating will take a single high speed round, but the ceramics shatter. Therefore providing "NO" protection for the next round. Russia is taking advantage but having a new rifle with a high cycle rate that will in effect throw two round down range along the same trajectory. First one shatters, second one pentrates.

 

Of course you don't hear about this as not only to the troops "want" and "need" the "new" stuff, but you actually need a lot of extra plates laying around to replace quickly.

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detox,

 

Not entirely true.  My understanding of the "new" body armor is the plating will take a single high speed round, but the ceramics shatter.  Therefore providing "NO" protection for the next round.  Russia is taking advantage but having a new rifle with a high cycle rate that will in effect throw two round down range along the same trajectory.  First one shatters, second one pentrates.

 

Of course you don't hear about this as not only to the troops "want" and "need" the "new" stuff, but you actually need a lot of extra plates laying around to replace quickly.

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You're correct, I misspoke when comparing the two types of body armor. The old RBA which I use to wear could not stop a 7.62 round. The new Interceptor body armor can stop one 7.62 round from 50 meters. The problem they're going to run into is the insurgents will upgrade to a stronger round. (ex armor piercing, smart ammunition) I wish I could find the video. There is a video where they put level IV body armor on live animals. What they did was try out different ammo to see what got through it. Not exactly endorsed by PETA, but it got the point across.

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The new Interceptor body armor can stop one 7.62 round from 50 meters.  The problem they're going to run into is the insurgents will upgrade to a stronger round.

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Key words in that being "one round". Won't stop two...and I'm willing to bet that most of the gomers over there taking potshots at the troops don't take single shots. You probably don't need any special ammo if you can put more than one shot on target.

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Key words in that being "one round".  Won't stop two...and I'm willing to bet that most of the gomers over there taking potshots at the troops don't take single shots.  You probably don't need any special ammo if you can put more than one shot on target.

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You need to put two on the same plate. There are multiple plates in the jacket Tom. First round hitting will break it's integrity. So in theory you could get hit multiple times , just not in the same plate. Second one is going through.

 

The other problem though is making the new jackets and plates. It takes time. These things were only approved last year. Also, the loss of integrity after one hit was part of the issue. While the old jacket did not stop rounds from higher trajectory ammo, the maintained their integrity through multiple hits with shrapnel, slower rounds. The new jacket will not.

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You need to put two on the same plate.  There are multiple plates in the jacket Tom.  First round hitting will break it's integrity.  So in theory you could get hit multiple times , just not in the same plate.  Second one is going through.

 

You know I knew that. :w00t:

 

While the old jacket did stop rounds from higher trajectory ammo, the maintained their integrity through multiple hits with shrapnel, slower rounds.  The new jacket will not.

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That I didn't know. Of course, bullets stand a much greater chance of killing you than shrapnel does, so one could argue it's a reasonable trade-off...but personally, I wouldn't.

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You know I knew that.  :w00t:

That I didn't know.  Of course, bullets stand a much greater chance of killing you than shrapnel does, so one could argue it's a reasonable trade-off...but personally, I wouldn't.

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There should have been a not in the original message. The old jackets did not stop high speed rounds

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There should have been a not in the original message.  The old jackets did not stop high speed rounds

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You're right...there should have been. Interestingly enough...I hallucinated one anyway. I knew what you meant.

 

What I didn't know was that the new armor was more vulnerable to shrapnel. Hell, I can imagine certain situations where that makes it worse than useless...

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You're right...there should have been.  Interestingly enough...I hallucinated one anyway.  I knew what you meant. 

 

What I didn't know was that the new armor was more vulnerable to shrapnel.  Hell, I can imagine certain situations where that makes it worse than useless...

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Obviously I don't have anything more than conjecture and what friends have told me. But I have no reason to doubt what they say. The plating integrity is real important on the new vests. Someone described it as a car airbag. It works once and then has to be replaced. Whether it's a 10 mph Rosen or a 60 mph Rosen.

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Obviously I don't have anything more than conjecture and what friends have told me.  But I have no reason to doubt what they say.  The plating integrity is real important on the new vests.  Someone described it as a car airbag.  It works once and then has to be replaced.  Whether it's a 10 mph Rosen or a 60 mph Rosen.

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Given what I know of ceramics (a little), it makes sense. Steel plating or similar has enough elasticity to not have integrity compromised away from the impact spot. Ceramics are harder (in the materials science sense)...they might resist impact, but the shock carries through the entire plate and compromises the integrity.

 

I'm kind of surprised they weren't able to work around it, even within the weight limitations, as the hardness vs. elasticity problem in armor is an old and, for vehicles, not unsolved one.

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Given what I know of ceramics (a little), it makes sense.  Steel plating or similar has enough elasticity to not have integrity compromised away from the impact spot.  Ceramics are harder (in the materials science sense)...they might resist impact, but the shock carries through the entire plate and compromises the integrity.

 

I'm kind of surprised they weren't able to work around it, even within the weight limitations, as the hardness vs. elasticity problem in armor is an old and, for vehicles, not unsolved one.

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I haven't seen the new plating they also tested last year and are putting on vehicles now. But the old stuff was heavy and think. And too be honest I only ever saw it on a few vehicles (general's humvee). Most folks in the Corps , used sandbags on the floor, hood, roof, etc... Of course, this was the Corps, not the privledged folks in the Army and the Army reserve. :w00t:

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I haven't seen the new plating they also tested last year and are putting on vehicles now.  But the old stuff was heavy and think.  And too be honest I only ever saw it on a few vehicles (general's humvee).  Most folks in the Corps , used sandbags on the floor, hood, roof, etc...  Of course, this was the Corps, not the privledged folks in the Army and the Army reserve.  :w00t:

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I'm surprised our resident "paramilitary expert" hasn't seen and commented on any of the photos out there of LAVs/Strykers armored with bedsprings. I mean, how incompetent is Rumsfeld anyway, that the soldiers in Iraq have so little confidence in their vehicles that even bedsprings are an improvement in their armor... :P

 

:(

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I'm surprised our resident "paramilitary expert" hasn't seen and commented on any of the photos out there of LAVs/Strykers armored with bedsprings.  I mean, how incompetent is Rumsfeld anyway, that the soldiers in Iraq have so little confidence in their vehicles that even bedsprings are an improvement in their armor...  :w00t:

 

:P

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Do you know why they do that?

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I'm surprised our resident "paramilitary expert" hasn't seen and commented on any of the photos out there of LAVs/Strykers armored with bedsprings.  I mean, how incompetent is Rumsfeld anyway, that the soldiers in Iraq have so little confidence in their vehicles that even bedsprings are an improvement in their armor...  :devil:

 

;)

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Actually those are Slinkys, not bedsprings. Neither meet milspec though. :devil:

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What an hypocritical, lying ass.  May he rot in hell for the families who have been devastated, and are about to be torn to their very souls this Christmas, for starting a war without reason, or end.

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You're disgusting !!!

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