Thought some of you might be interested in this breakthrough re: a stronger, lighter replacement for the Kevlar helmets currently in use. I love the line about having to get stronger test guns.

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
No free lunches; adding protection (or weaponry, or water, or fuel, or food, or batteries, or...) gives a plus in one area but a negative in another -- true whether the weapons system is a fighter plane or an infantryman.TexDotCom wrote:Someone commented on that article re: face shields, but another made a statement that marching up a mountain with a face shield on would not be preferred. I would be inclined to agree, as I would worry about additional heat, the shield fogging up, potential vision distortion, etc. On the flip side, more protection for the noggin and its surrounding parts is definitely something I would favor.
Zoomie wrote:I don't see a real downside to a helmet that is stronger and lighter, unless of course some other problem such as degradation occurs. Secondly, it said the helmet was capable of stopping a 7.62 round... 7.62x39? 7.62X51? 7.62X54R? And that's not even going into different types of bullets.
As a former paratrooper with the 82nd, not sure how this would work. The shield would need to be strong enough to sustain a close proximity blast. I'm not sure it could be an attachment, rather a perminant type fixture on the helmet.surprise_i'm_armed wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_GIQ3eKOvc
The above link is a 1M:23S long video of British Army soldiers who were
saved by bullets striking their helmets, armored vests, or iPods.
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http://www.gizmag.com/face-shields-on-a ... ets/17037/
The above link refers to research showing that American military helmets
should have face protection in order to more fully protect from IED blasts, etc.
SIA
Probably like getting beaned by a 100 mph fastball. I wouldn't like that either!The Annoyed Man wrote:I know that the alternative is less than desirable, but imagine what the impact must be like when a .30 cal rifle round is stopped cold by your helmet without deflecting it, fired from close range. It must be like getting hit by a sledgehammer. That's better than having the round penetrate, but I'll bet it would give you a heck of a headache.