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Thread: Soft Armor

  1. #1
    Site Supporter DocGKR's Avatar
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    Soft Armor

    NIJ body armor testing is flawed and does not adequately assess the protective qualities of soft body armor. These problems have been known for quite some time. For example, the U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) published “Police Body Armor Standards and Testing”, a two volume critique of NIJ armor testing 16 years ago:

    U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Police Body Armor Standards and Testing, Volume I, OTA-ISC-534 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, August 1992).

    U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Police Body Armor Standards and Testing, Volume II: Appendices, OTA-ISC-535 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, September 1992).

    During that same time period, several other papers, highly critical of NIJ testing were also published:

    Jason, A; Fackler, ML: "Body Armor Standards: A Review and Analysis." Wound Ballistics Review, 1(1), Winter 1991.

    Bachner, TE: "The 'V50 Ballistic Limit: A Reliable Test for Body Armor." Wound Ballistics Review, 1(4); pp 20-25, 1994.

    MacPherson, D: "Projectile Dynamic Interactions and Associated Body Armor Effects." Wound Ballistics Review, 1(4); pp 29-31, 1994.

    MacPherson, D; Fincel, E; Miloskovich, N: "Body Armor Penetration Dynamics." Wound Ballistics Review, 3(2); pp 16-24, 1997.

    MacPherson, D: "A body Armor Penetration Rumor." Wound Ballistics Review, 3(4); p 29, 1997.

    Unfortunately, NIJ did not make substantial improvements in their methodology over the next decade…

    Fast forward to late 2001 and early 2002 when NIJ was informed by several sources that Zylon was exhibiting early degradation and was at risk for penetration--NIJ’s initial response was to pretend there was no problem. Only after several vests were perforated and officers were killed and wounded did NIJ finally begin a S L O W investigation that ultimately led to Zylon’s decertification in the fall of 2005, some four years after the problem was first identified.

    Although the Zylon problems are thankfully now behind us, there is another problematic issue that NIJ is also aware of, but has once again failed to address--the ongoing problems associated with polyethelene laminate soft armor, including:

    1) Contact shot failures
    2) Curling
    3) Delamination
    4) Stiffness
    5) Heat retention
    6) Material strength degradation in heat
    7) Compression set wrinkling
    8) Fiber migration

    According to the last batch of data I saw reported from the FBI Uniform Crime Reports, approximately 1/3 of the incidents where officer’s were killed or wounded occurred at contact or near-contact distances. This seems like a fairly high potential for contact shots, yet NIJ inexplicably fails to test for this event. Contact shots can cause extensive damage to polyethelene laminate soft vest materials (Spectra Shield, Gold Flex, Dyneema, etc…) as noted in the photos below:









    Contact shots appear to melt polyethelene laminate vest materials and result in large holes in the vests containing polyethelene laminate materials. Even when bullets are stopped, large holes are burned deeply into the polyethelene laminate materials resulting in the vests offering minimal protection against second shots to previously hit areas. In contrast, 100% woven p-aramid vests can withstand contact shots with little damage, even in areas with multiple hits. For example, it took 8 contact shots of 9 mm FMJ, rapidly placed into the same location before this eleven year old Level II Kevlar vest finally allowed a full penetration, as noted in the photo below:

    Last edited by DocGKR; 07-21-2016 at 11:50 AM.
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  2. #2
    Site Supporter DocGKR's Avatar
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    1/1/15

    Beginning in the early 1990's when the IWBA and the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment first publicly unveiled the serious errors and flaws with NIJ testing, it has been obvious that a new body armor test methodology was needed. The recent problems with Zylon and polyethelene laminate materials, along with the unethical behavior of many in the body armor industry has only reinforced the need for improved testing. The current FBI Soft Body Armor Protocol is a superbly conceived soft armor assessment that is the finest in existence, far surpassing the current NIJ body armor standards (http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/223054.pdf). The FBI Armor Protocol is highly recommended; it is the new standard for body armor evaluation and will greatly contribute to improved officer safety. Any LE agency that knowingly chooses to purchase vests that don't meet the FBI body armor test protocols is doing their officers a grave injustice...

    For LE patrol use where the risk of contact shots is high, you want a vest tested and warranted to stop at least your own duty handgun round. The best soft armor choices remain vests that have passed either the FBI Soft Body Armor Test Protocol or any 100% all WOVEN p-aramid soft armor.

    Current vests that meet the FBI test protocol include:
    DBT/First Choice Armor: NForce2 S6x-06.1 (level II)
    DBT/First Choice Armor: SynergyXS6X (level IIIa)
    KDH: LTST-102-IIIA (level IIIa)
    Point Blank/PACA/Paraclete/PPE: AX (level II and IIIa)
    Point Blank/PACA/Paraclete/PPE: AIIIA-1 (level IIIa)
    Point Blank/PACA/Paraclete/PPE: DX (level II and IIIa)
    Point Blank/PACA/Paraclete/PPE: FLXIIIA (level IIIa)
    Point Blank/PACA/Paraclete/PPE: SP+2LE (level II)
    Survival Armor: Paragon6 LWIIIa (level IIIa)

    Previous soft armor that has meet the FBI spec includes the level IIIa DBT/CAT RVA3A fabricated with Kevlar XLT over backing layers of Kevlar XP, the level IIIa DBT/CAT QVA3A-1 built using approximately a 50/50 mix of Twaron backed by Dyneema, the level IIIa Paraclete KNX3A made using Twaron and Goldflex, as well as the level IIIa Pinnacle Armor S2000-3A-01 all Twaron armor).

    100% all WOVEN p-aramid soft armor that has worked well includes armor like the level IIIa U.S. Armor Enforcer Classic and the level IIIa Paraclete K3K3A all Twaron armor).


    In addition, although built using a Kevlar polyethelene laminate material, the the level IIIa Velocity Systems VS13A has demonstrated the ability to stop service caliber contact shots in independent testing. (Note--buyers should be wary, as there are laminated aramids, such as Gold Flex, that can be called 100% aramids, that are NOT the same as 100% WOVEN p-aramids.)

    Remember--armor that passes the FBI Body Armor Test Protocol and 100% woven p-aramid vests may be a bit thicker, but they offer substantially more protection than many other vests on the market. Officer's need to know that lighter, thinner, more expensive vests are NOT necessarily offering better protection. In addition, 100% woven p-aramid armor has demonstrated very long service lives—we have tested numerous older Kevlar vests, including one that was 25 years old, a few that were 15 to 18 years old, and numerous vests in the 9-12 year range, that ALL continued to easily stop the threats they were rated for, including multiple contact shots from the same 9 mm and .44 Mag loads that perforated brand new polyethelene laminate vests.

    Obviously, if you are NOT likely to get hit with a contact shot, for example military personnel on the battlefield, then contact shot performance is not as critical as for end-users, like U.S. LE patrol officers, who are likely to face contact shot threats.

    Progressive LE agencies are beginning to require that all vests purchased for uniformed patrol MUST pass the FBI Body Armor Test Protocol.

    Vest purchasing contracts should always specify that each new vest come with TWO (2) vest carriers; in addition, going with one (1) wide side closure strap on each side rather than two (2) smaller ones is a good idea. Also, savvy agencies are inserting contractual requirements authorizing unannounced visits to the armor vendor's manufacturing facility to observe how the raw armor materials are stored and inspect the armor while it is being assembled.

    This is a good example of an acceptable LE agency body armor procurement: http://www.bidsync.com/DPX?ac=view&auc=108034.
    Last edited by DocGKR; 07-21-2016 at 01:35 PM.
    Facts matter...Feelings Can Lie
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