Body ARMOR For POLICE and Security: The Basics

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  • čas přidán 23. 08. 2024
  • What kind of bulletproof vest should you use as a cop or security guard? soft or hard? Kevlar? Spectra? Dynema? Steel plate? ceramic plates? polyethylene rifle plate? What about trauma plates? Level 2? level 3A? Are they really bulletproof? Follow me on INSTAGRAM: / tommy_freefieldtraining
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @paulwitmer4611
    @paulwitmer4611 Před 4 lety +40

    Okay so make a specific suggestion a vendor & brands

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 4 lety +16

      While I'm partial to Safe Life Defense because we have shot a whole bunch of their armor always with great results on the channel
      (czcams.com/video/7qL8s_DpUDc/video.html)
      (czcams.com/video/lWIRFa7Zbk8/video.html)
      (czcams.com/video/Ou4G7xKC954/video.html)
      There are many great brands of soft and hard body armor out there. Point blank, Safariland, ect. The key is to find one that works for your purposes and budget.

    • @paulwitmer4611
      @paulwitmer4611 Před 4 lety

      Okay field training everybody is purpose is the same keeping something from getting through your chest you should be able to suggest a good combination of lightweight flexible substantial protection
      And an excellent pricing
      Source.

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety +10

      @@paulwitmer4611
      Armor Triangle:
      Protection, Cost, Ergonomic
      Choose two.
      In case of steel armor, autochoose Cost.

    • @DJUwU
      @DJUwU Před 4 lety

      @@KoishiVibin Oh....and in the case that is all 3....expect the product to be backordered for 3 months...

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      @@DJUwU
      There is no all three.
      You won't find an AA4Universal Plate for less than a couple thousand nowadays.

  • @TheBiggityBoyd
    @TheBiggityBoyd Před 5 lety +165

    If I work in an area with a bunch of rifle threats as a security guard, I'm leaving ASAP. I did not get out of the Army to be shot at with rifles in the US.

    • @biteme19671
      @biteme19671 Před 5 lety +18

      But that is more increasing, even as an officer wearing lllA soft body armor, some will insert a Sappi plate into the carrier, and even some of us will buy our own level lV steel or ceramic body armor to keep in the trunk in case we respond to a rifle situation.

    • @Nocturnalzyx
      @Nocturnalzyx Před 5 lety +24

      less than 5% of murders in the US involve rifle firearms. That said I'd do plate armor just to be extra sure. Discomfort is less important than safety.

    • @jacobmikel4981
      @jacobmikel4981 Před 4 lety +3

      Is there such thing as lvl 5? Do you no?

    • @biteme19671
      @biteme19671 Před 4 lety +6

      @@jacobmikel4981 There a level 5 body armor, meant for military application, it's called dragon armor.

    • @totenkopfan6296
      @totenkopfan6296 Před 4 lety +4

      @@biteme19671 I doesn't work that good, i'd say it's overhyped, i think it didn't even pass the tests, it seems to be even worse than IIIa. It seemed promising though.

  • @p51mustang24
    @p51mustang24 Před 5 lety +126

    I always wear a second t-shirt to protect myself.

    • @hotsnottatertot5451
      @hotsnottatertot5451 Před 4 lety +6

      Superman shirts are da'bomb, yo!

    • @sea_unusual
      @sea_unusual Před 3 lety

      @@dcjosephine1774 you may be a genius

    • @Echolimabravo321
      @Echolimabravo321 Před 3 lety +1

      When your at home,sitting in your favorite lazy-boy recliner? In case you spill your beer, you wont have to get up and get a towel... just sit there and let it air dry? 🤔☠️👽😂😂

  • @FuzzFam
    @FuzzFam Před 7 lety +308

    You realize you're like the professor of our profession right? Your knowledge base is incredible. Another great video T!

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +22

      +FuzzFam Now if I could only learn to spell! Lol

    • @adrianakuzmikova1697
      @adrianakuzmikova1697 Před 5 lety +2

      @@freefieldtraining is there some groin protection that can be used as EDC? one shot in groin even with 22LR will shut down everyone.

    • @mrd7067
      @mrd7067 Před 5 lety +1

      @@adrianakuzmikova1697
      From what i understand the only groin protections there are are military, cutresistant or for sports.
      Military: Flaps on some vests that you can fold down. Usually not worn (or only on guard duty) because it`s not pleasant to wear when walking. The second thing are "blast proof" underpants which protect from explosions. Might protect from some guns but probably won`t.
      Cutresistant: There are underpants (shorts and longjohns) which can protect you from cuts and limited from stabs.
      Sport: For men there are some for some sports. They protect if you get attacked there by blunt force (not from guns). I don`t know if they even exist for women though.
      The groin area is, apart from the head one of the worst places to get hit (although it is not a direct fight stopper in most cases). Even direct medical help (IFAK / whatever) might not be able to help there because it is arguably impssible to stop the bleeding. Thats also a reason why the groin is a alternative third target after a "doubletab" (body, body head) or, if very close/surprised the primary target area.

    • @tomsoki5738
      @tomsoki5738 Před 4 lety +1

      Adriana Kuzmikova you can get level 3a groin protector boxes, have a look at demolition ranches video on bulletproof groin protectors

  • @ferna2294
    @ferna2294 Před 6 lety +55

    This video is 14 minutes 35 secs of FULL information. You can´t get deeper than this.
    Thank you so much.
    Subscribed!

  • @jcoll2727
    @jcoll2727 Před 5 lety +16

    Thank You, I am currently working as Executive Armed Security. I will be buying and wearing a vest at my next detail. I have been doing this for almost 4 years without one. I never served in the military, been a police officer, I interned at a police department, all my time in college. I am an internationally certified Firefighter, but there is so much to know and I am still learning, how to do my job in a safer and more professional. I have a new boss, retired secret service. Awesome boss and mentor, he keeps asking where is your vest!
    So again, Thank You, in less than 15 minutes, I know and understand what’s right for me

    • @nativewarrior1262
      @nativewarrior1262 Před 5 lety +2

      You can get an outer wear Vest that can catch Ar15, Ak47 rounds and much more

  • @chrisafp071
    @chrisafp071 Před 6 lety +90

    I work unarmed security on dangerous sites and I'm not sure how to take a step in the right direction for my career. Too much is expected of us with 0 training and 0 gear, I had to buy even my own flashlight, boots, spray, they gave me a shirt. I guess that is paying the bills and staying a float but I really hope some crackhead doesn't end me too early. I work my ass off over 60hrs per week, sometimes more.

    • @FDGREAPER
      @FDGREAPER Před 6 lety +15

      Chris Taylor buy a vest and go armed

    • @jonathanmathews3035
      @jonathanmathews3035 Před 6 lety +22

      Chris Taylor I'm a senior supervisor for my agency we have to buy our own gear as well. I tell all my guards to invest on armor. The number one thing you want to think about is you go home alive.

    • @jonathanmathews3035
      @jonathanmathews3035 Před 6 lety +9

      The vest he is wearing is a safe life 3a vest they take payments.

    • @cryhavoc9748
      @cryhavoc9748 Před 5 lety +10

      When it comes down to what my boss says I can and cannot carry, it boils down to this.... when it comes to a choice between my job and my life, I can always get another job. A friend of mine (an armed security guard) was fired after a justified use of his firearm. Company policy was that they be loaded with FMJ ammo. His pistol was loaded with Hornady Critical Defense. The State Law Enforcement Division ruled it justified, but he was terminated from the security company for carrying an unauthorized round.

    • @CyberLord5G
      @CyberLord5G Před 5 lety +3

      No training for unarmed? NYS makes it mandatory that Unarmed take 24 hours training before being licensed. Armed is an extra 47 hrs plus 16 hours annual.

  • @Marco-bf4uu
    @Marco-bf4uu Před 6 lety +107

    We federal police officers in germany get an Level 4+ plate carrier issued. But in germany the last active shooter situation was in 2004 and he had an 22lr. And mostly we only must deal with knifes. But its germany everything must be perfect and Safe.

    • @noahno
      @noahno Před 5 lety +8

      Strange, the internet seems to believe that criminals dont care about gun laws and without 300 million+ guns in civilian hands the criminals would run wild. So confused 🤔😂 (sarcasm)

    • @caveymoley
      @caveymoley Před 5 lety +11

      Count yourself lucky that the state cares enough about its police to provide them with solid equipment...
      Many place just get battered, second-hand and borderline obsolete gear.

    • @gabriel39495
      @gabriel39495 Před 5 lety +21

      @@noahno you have another contries that prohibited guns and still have a high crime hate, so you can't say that the main factor for germany safety are the gun laws. You can't isolate this variable.

    • @martinramos8036
      @martinramos8036 Před 5 lety

      Lol their goes your backs

    • @stefankecina
      @stefankecina Před 5 lety +6

      @@noahno "Germany has a good system of legal gun ownership, but illegal firearms pose a big problem," said Nils Duquet, a weapons expert in Belgium who works for the Flemish Peace Institute. According to Duquet, there are millions of illegal weapons in Europe, but he said it is impossible to know exactly how many.
      I had to lol

  • @bennconner1195
    @bennconner1195 Před 5 lety +15

    If your in the military I think a mix of soft Armour and hard armour is the way to go. A Hybrid level 3A body armour/plate Carrier would be ideal.

  • @kelleymcmahan6457
    @kelleymcmahan6457 Před 7 lety +41

    I had an instructor years ago, what he suggested was to wear body armor that would stop whatever round you were carrying. Due to the vast majority of security/police shootings are killed by their own weapons.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +13

      +Kelley McMahan That is good advice. Though the vast majority of security /police killed are not killed by their own weapons. It is still a significant risk. Today though all commercial soft armor will stop anything you should be using as a duty round. There are some outliers, like 357sig but they are a rare issue.

    • @Nosurrender115
      @Nosurrender115 Před 5 lety +1

      Kelley McMahan very incorrect information.

    • @DavidLLambertmobile
      @DavidLLambertmobile Před 5 lety

      In 2019, this is false. What kills most sworn LE officers 🇺🇸🚔, is traffic accidents not gun shots, 🔪 wounds. 😉. Also about 35-40% of sworn officers killed by ammunition are hit in non body armor areas. Be aware too, fabric body armor systems can wear or lose effectiveness after 4-5 years...

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      @Mike Evans
      Ammunition dependent. Also, uncommon round and mediocre wounding.

  • @polargaming9133
    @polargaming9133 Před 7 lety +5

    As a civilian(who wants to become a police officer) I never understood why police officer security etc. Never used plates that stop a 44 magnum but now I do thank you. Be safe ⚫🔵⚫

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +2

      +Polar Gaming cbase that dream brother. It is the greatest show on earth.

  • @AnthonyClauser
    @AnthonyClauser Před 7 lety +1

    It is so refreshing for a cop on CZcams that presents facts as facts, but much more important, opinions as opinions, but especially in a dignified fashion.
    Far too many present opinions as fact, or even worse in a very condescending fashion.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +1

      +Anthony Clauser Well, the problem is that social media encourages such behavior and so they get the loudest voice and biggest following. If you want to see more stuff like this please share the videos you like to Facebook, redit and such. It helps more than you could know.

  • @fraleo2192
    @fraleo2192 Před 3 lety +3

    wow finally an explanation for what level 1 was, ive been looking everywhere for it and it was driving me crazy

  • @whoop2684
    @whoop2684 Před 7 lety +176

    I want to be able to be shot with a lmg and laugh

    • @vradic03
      @vradic03 Před 7 lety +4

      GeKin lol

    • @charielity6071
      @charielity6071 Před 7 lety +23

      GeKin get in a robot that has 9 inch thick steel plates, than you can laugh at them when you kill them

    • @whoop2684
      @whoop2684 Před 7 lety +16

      Asriel Dreemurr so a tank

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +18

      +GeKin steel plate. Might catch a little so all though, lol

    • @paullytle246
      @paullytle246 Před 7 lety +6

      GeKin it deosnt stop the impact

  • @joshuabrown9439
    @joshuabrown9439 Před 7 lety +16

    I love this channel
    I'm down with nearly EVERY video

  • @ARHZONE
    @ARHZONE Před 4 lety +2

    From my perspective (have been working as an armed and unarmed security officer in the Houston area for a few years now) i personally think it really depends on both the area you work in, as well as the necessity of what your job entails. Without a doubt, both police and security officers (especially in the more crime ridden parts of cities) face challenges everyday, some much more than others. I have met security officers who have seen more action than most polices officers i have met, and i have met police who have seen a good deal themselves working in inner city Houston and my main opinion is the fact that you should only get what you believe if absolutely necessary for your location and job. I have worked with security officers in a very low crime rated area wearing level 3 vests and i have known armed guards who work in inner city Houston with tons of gun violence who either wear nothing or the lowest level armor they could find. It really comes down to your own preference and your own money, but in my line of work, i personally prefer a level 2 standard vest (possibly a level 3a, no particular brands) due to statistically, the most gun related violence you come across is with that of hand guns, and the most common types such as 9mm, .357, etc. While there is always the threat of an active shooter or killers with rifles, most of the time those are very low on the spectrum compared to hand guns.
    I've always had the mindset that you should take your equipment into consideration with your environment. If you are guarding an armored truck with tons of money or working at a government institution, banks or in a crime ridden part of town, then maybe going a bit heavier with the armor and other equipment is needed to be prepared. But if you are simply guarding a vacant parking lot or a warehouse in a quiet part of town, then i highly doubt you would need a level 3 or 4 standard vest armed with a 12g shotgun. A simple level 2 or 3a vest that can stop most common handgun types that is also a bit more mobile, is your safest bet.
    I myself wish to purchase a level 2 or 3a while continuing my security career and believe it will do me more than enough.

  • @michaelanderson548
    @michaelanderson548 Před 4 lety +1

    I use IIIA soft body armor that wraps around in a carrier that also allows me to insert either a trauma plate or small soft IIIA sheet. I don't use the trauma plate, I use a small soft armor sheet to minimize any chest trauma. The only problem is that it's not stab resistant/proof. That upped the cost by a lot. But, I could see using it in a correctional facility. I also carry a IIIA sheet in my backpack where the laptop would go and a larger IIIA sheet behind the seat in my truck.

  • @daviddebergh254
    @daviddebergh254 Před 7 lety +3

    I have a level 3 soft armor with 3a trama plates in front and back

  • @mr.mrs.bounds1901
    @mr.mrs.bounds1901 Před 5 lety +18

    Rural small towns = higher rifle/shotgun count

    • @mikemoon7549
      @mikemoon7549 Před 5 lety

      Nobody seems to recognize this. Where I live you're much more likely to be shot with a 12 guage slug, a .308, 30-06 or even a .338 rather than a 9mm or a .357... Good luck surviving a hit from one of those with soft armor. A .338 will pass thru your vest and body both sides and then continue into your partner behind you... not even sure how a level 4 plate would fare against that.

    • @striker6240
      @striker6240 Před 4 lety +2

      Rural small towns = little to no crime

    • @loganwebb5086
      @loganwebb5086 Před 3 lety

      Here before civil war

  • @sminem6572
    @sminem6572 Před 7 lety +1

    What do you think is better for home breaching? (not robbing, serving arrest warrants and search warrants)

  • @LuisGonzalez-gl4wc
    @LuisGonzalez-gl4wc Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you your vid. Just sold me on the Safelife vest. I just ordered in Coyote. What I like about your vid is the realistic scenarios. The other vids try to get you to get plate carriers, but you sacrifice so much area to a threat. Plus, I’ll later get a level 4 plate. Thanks and keep up the good work!!

  • @whitebadger380
    @whitebadger380 Před 6 lety +4

    Great video helped me immensely in choosing my vest.

    • @DavidLLambertmobile
      @DavidLLambertmobile Před 5 lety

      Streichers of MN & Galls.com are great 🚔 & private security corrections officers. Be safe! 😁

  • @musicguy25100
    @musicguy25100 Před 5 lety +4

    I'm from Chicago and i drive pass some tugs on the street especially Englewood that carry rifles on them.

    • @markalford5406
      @markalford5406 Před 5 lety +2

      I thought it was illegal to carry in Chicago, maybe we should pass more laws

    • @constantinevx
      @constantinevx Před 5 lety

      They do not carry rifles here in Chicago. They if anything they have submachine weapons. That being said majority of what they carry here in Chicago is pistols.

    • @TheBucketSkill
      @TheBucketSkill Před 4 lety

      @@constantinevx They definitely have access to rifles. AR-15 pistols, they have very short barrels to be concealed and AK Draco pistol which can use 7.62... though these are likely rare.

  • @angelmontiel3186
    @angelmontiel3186 Před 3 lety +1

    This helped me a lot for my security work I was going to get to level 3 A+ you saved me some money so thank you

  • @FilosefeAbstrac
    @FilosefeAbstrac Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for this video, I just invested in a Safe Life Defense Level IIIa+ first response vest with a hard rifle plate for the front. I do armed security for a religious place of worship part-time, so the weight won't really be a factor.

  • @sigmasafety
    @sigmasafety Před 7 lety +7

    Just a thought, you may want to define "back face deformation" for people that are unfamiliar with the term. NIJ allows 41mm BFD (aka BFS = Back Face Signature).
    It's also worth mentioning that many higher-end manufacturers list Special Threats which NIJ permits: the manufacturer can test and list in addition to NIJ certification. For example, Armor Express Level II SBA has special threat declarations for .44 mag and .357 Sig (both of which are NIJ IIIA rounds). It's an important factor in armour selection.
    Lastly, thanks for preaching about coverage! Have a look a the FBI statistics on officers killed or injured. ucr.fbi.gov/leoka/2015/tables/table_37_leos_fk_with_fas_while_wearing_body_armor_point_of_entry_for_fatal_torso_wounds_2006-2015.xls About 50% of the officers who die from gunfire (other than a rifle round that penetrates their SBA) die from the bullet entering either between the sides of the vest or around the arm-hole. Lots more info about these events on the main FBI page; ucr.fbi.gov/leoka/2015/home/resource-pages/leoka_tables_by_title_-2015
    Great video - keep it up.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +1

      +Sigma Safety Corp. The problem with video format, as I'm sure you know, is that you can only cram so much into a length that people will watch. I'm already talking pretty fast and have to cut lots of stuff out to make a video that is concise enough for people to understand. This video was compiled from almost three hours of filming, lol.
      Explaining backface deformation to people who are new to armor is a big issue that I just couldn't tackle in this video completely as people really don't have a relatable standard of measure. Saying x number of mm in calibrated clay means nothing to your average person. I actually backed armor with 1" pine boards and shot it in a couple videos just to give people a standard of measure that they could relate to. You can check them out if you are so inclined :
      czcams.com/video/_sbN_Y6nnoc/video.html
      And
      czcams.com/video/Ou4G7xKC954/video.html
      It wasn't too scientific but I think it taught people more than they would learn looking at me measuring clay indents. I was excited to see in the comments that people had no idea before watching that getting hit in the armor would feel like getting hit full on with a framing hammer. That's when I know I am actually teaching something useful.
      I've never seen an NIJ special threats standard for soft armor certification. Since 357 Sig and 44 mag are THE 3a test it makes me wonder what those standards are. If you have a link I would love to read up on it. I always thought "special threats" were independent of NIJ certification.
      Coverage is the name of the game man, you don't have to thank me for preaching it. I'm sick of seeing guys wearing (or worse getting issued) nipple protectors and thinking they are protected. It really has been the worst thing that came out of the "let's all look like Special forces" craze. All people see is a list of specs on a page and it is hard to make a spec for coverage area. I would argue that, at least for civilian LE and security work, coverage area is at least as important as protection level. I had a company try to send me their level 3a 10x12 soft plate for testing claiming it was the "best bulletproof vest" or some other similar shananagins. I could hardly contain my laughter. I can't tell people that is quality gear.
      Thanks for commenting man, I always appreciate hearing from people in the industry and if you have a link to the special threats stuff I really would like to read it, I'm always up to learn new things.

    • @sigmasafety
      @sigmasafety Před 7 lety +2

      Thanks for the note. Yes, I struggle with the content-vs-length as well. You did a great job overall.
      As far as Special Threats, NIJ allows companies to self-declare special threats. No ST's are certified specifically by NIJ though often companies will get 3rd party labs to certify the armour against the threats. See pg 57 of the NIJ 0101.06 standards, though it's a very brief mention of Special Threats.
      As you can imagine, armour companies are HUGE on liability protection. If they put in writing (i.e. on their spec sheets) then they have to stand by that. If they say their armour is Special Threat rated for a specific .357 Sig, for example, then the armour fails against that round, the armour company would be held liable.
      NIJ certification is the first thing to look for, as you mentioned in the video. Without NIJ certification, basically you don't know what it'll stop (maybe nothing - there really is no way of telling).
      Keep up the great work. Thanks for your service!

  • @Stag15L
    @Stag15L Před 7 lety +4

    i was always told wear armor that atleast stops what you carry. i weat 3a because wear i do security is in the hood

  • @aaronwilkinson8963
    @aaronwilkinson8963 Před 2 lety

    I was a British soldier and we was issued osprey body armour. The plates were like glass or some kind of resin they were see through. Plates front and back but the rest of it was soft kevlar. Obviously it would not stop an AK round but they did tell us it would hold our guts in.

  • @TRIGGZ123
    @TRIGGZ123 Před 4 lety

    This channel is literally free training classes, keep up the good work and be safe out there brother

  • @bobcauthon
    @bobcauthon Před 7 lety +15

    What's your thoughts/experiences on external body armor carriers? Worth it or too "tactical?" It seems convenient, but since I have to buy my own gear, I'm wary. As a side note, I would say rifle and pistol threats are almost even in my day to day. You city boys...LOL...might not have such a threat, but serving warrants in rural areas...where I swear I heard a banjo - ba-da-dang-dang dang-dang, dang...these country folk are more likely to walk outside with a rifle or shotgun than a pistol.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +3

      +Bob Kawthun external carriers don't have to be too "tactical". Blauer makes one that looks just like the uniform shirt. It is almost indistinguishable from twenty feet away. We wear rifle armor for warrants and such here too. Plenty of choppers floating around my neck of the woods too. For security guards though... I still call shananagins.

    • @bobcauthon
      @bobcauthon Před 7 lety

      I bought a second chance 3A vest, that cost me $1000! I don't want to have to take it in and out of an external carrier as situations change, plus getting dressed and undressed is a pain in the ass, and I just found your video on the safe life carriers. I like them...especially at half the cost, (but it's still 500 bucks!...I know..my life is worth it!) a little bit of feedback that's making me hesitate. I figure you have some sort of relationship with them and may be able to pass the message better or have more weight when you "complain" about a feature. It would be nice if the 3x3 velcro section on the front was more like 5x3 or most of the way over to the badge holder. The big one though...no pockets for pens, cards, notebooks, etc. and no tabs for body cameras. In my breast pockets I carry my cards which I go through like oxygen, a pen, an extended cuff key, and my notebook. I would hate to have to sacrifice the medical kit, which is the big draw to this kind of vest, for administrative stuff. Also it might be nice if we could trade that flashlight pouch out for a cell phone pouch. If you feel uncomfortable passing these remarks on, I will do it on their website, but again I thought it might be better received from you vs. a potential "internet troll"...stay safe out there.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +1

      +Bob Kawthun There have already been plenty of discussion about doing a Molle vest cover so that people can put whatever pouches they want on them. I also know that they monitor the comments section on the product reviews so you could always leave suggestions there.

    • @658webster
      @658webster Před 6 lety +2

      Just gonna jump in, my department uses external carriers that have molle on the entire front and back. I prefer the external for the fact i like being able to easily take it off in the office when working on reports or just to cool off for a little bit. They do not lool as professional as interior vests but as far as im concerned the outer carriers are more comfortable if you get the right one, plus you can move some of the items on your belt up to the vest and take some weight off of your hips.

  • @larsmurdochkalsta8808
    @larsmurdochkalsta8808 Před 4 lety +1

    For clarification to my knowledge there is no NIJ certified steel armor. many companies will use clever tricks to make it seem like it should be. But my understanding is that it's not certified by the NIJ to meet that specification.

  • @omarmassey2522
    @omarmassey2522 Před 6 lety +1

    coverage is the reason why I'm not a fan of many plate carriers. most officers wouldn't need anything over level 2 with full coverage. I would probably have an IOTV or good quality plate carrier with coverage just in case, but not for everyday wear.

  • @jasone1881
    @jasone1881 Před 5 lety +7

    I wear a level 2 point blank soft armor, and have a plate carrier that has level 3a soft panels (covers most of my torso) and 10x12 level 3 plates front and back and 5x8 side plates, but the Carrier weighs 35 lbs 😵

    • @TheOtherFagola
      @TheOtherFagola Před 4 lety +1

      Jason Ellet Which brand of plate carrier are you using? I’m looking around for one that accepts soft and hard panels. It’s kinda hard though because most of the places I look don’t sell to pesky civilians.

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheOtherFagola
      Iirc, many use the JPC 2.0. Go to r/tacticalgear for some advice, it's pretty interesting.

    • @TheOtherFagola
      @TheOtherFagola Před 4 lety +1

      Norian Arijuna Got my set up already. IIIA BALCS planels with carrier with III”+” front and side plates and Crye deltoid and groin plates. My next PC will be their Airlite SPC for a more minimalist set up. Thanks for recommendation.

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      @@TheOtherFagola
      What are your plates? Out of curiosity?
      I swear, if you've fallen for AR500/Spartan Armor's bullshit...

    • @SylentONE
      @SylentONE Před 4 lety

      @@KoishiVibin
      What's wrong with Spartan Armor?

  • @captainraptor120
    @captainraptor120 Před 5 lety +6

    hey I am a firefighter and my department is wanting to get vest what would be a great vest for firefighters

    • @monikabataityte4283
      @monikabataityte4283 Před 4 lety +3

      anti-fire vest?

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      Most aramids are fire resistant iirc. Get something with good cooling to ensure no overheat.

    • @justinnewquist6111
      @justinnewquist6111 Před 4 lety

      Hey I’m a firefighter too and what I’ve seen with other departments is that they have hard body armor. They would be used for active shooter situations since firefighters/EMS may go with police in to try to triage those who have been shot.

  • @conorpatrick3487
    @conorpatrick3487 Před 5 lety +1

    Very informative....Separated the rye from the corn...Tks...."We are what we do regularly, excellence is not an act, it's a habit"..Aristotle

  • @Eslamizar
    @Eslamizar Před 7 lety +2

    I do hospital security and we run into a lot of crazy people. My employer does NOT provide body armor so I bought my own. I bought the Oregon City armor carrier form Safariland. I have the bullet resistant panels with the built in stab resistance (it's more of a corrections armor panels).
    I'm also running 5x8 side panels. I have 7x9 Protech Impac S.T. trauma plates front and back. With all of my other gear on the vest, it's about 30 pounds. If I put plates in my carrier (I have ceramic 4A) it is too heavy and too thick. So steel plates work better than my ceramics because it's thinner but I loose my AP capabilities.
    I don't run hard armor at work, too much weight and the odds of rifle rounds are very low in my area.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety

      +Eslamizar Here is my take on 30.06 AP. If a dude has it what are the chances he is not the tpe of guy who shoots people in the head? Think about it...30.06. So bolt guns, medium machine guns, and M1 garands. People who use those...are thankfully few and far between.

    • @rothesayprepper
      @rothesayprepper Před 5 lety

      I also work as a hospital security officer but in Canada. We are just in the process of getting level 3+ armor because rifles are easier up here then handguns.

  • @SafeLifeDefenseBodyArmor
    @SafeLifeDefenseBodyArmor Před 7 lety +6

    Fantastic video! Highly informative and well thought out. Keep up the great work! Oh, and thanks for the shoutout!

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +2

      +Safe Life Defense shouting will get much louder next week!

    • @peterpro2a
      @peterpro2a Před 6 lety

      free field training man oh man every vest I've looked up are pricey for me on my income I guess I'll just have to Rambo it every day but it looks like a very good product

  • @user-sd7qt3hy8l
    @user-sd7qt3hy8l Před 6 lety +2

    I just received a bulletproof vest, but i dont know anything about them. Mine doesnt have any directions on it nor any information really. All it says it's "Plate body armor" and it says its resistant from fragmentations and 9mm rounds. Is this a flack jacket or is it actual body armor? I honestly don't know. Thanks.

  • @richnorman7058
    @richnorman7058 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for specifying "back face deformation" and not penetration. I go back a few years in the security industry when soft armor was about it, with the IIIA being too expensive for most of us and it wasn't appropriate to use external hard armor like it 's become these days. It drives me nuts when I see and hear people talking about how such and such armor is "rated" to whatever level, but then implies that they're talking about penetration. As in, so and so pistol round won't be "stopped" by whatever level of soft armor. It's getting to be almost false advertising and people who are wanting body armor are hung up on something that just isn't true. Thank you again and I hope people that watch this video understand what you're saying.

  • @gabeagex
    @gabeagex Před 5 lety

    Listen to this man, he knows what he’s talking about. I am a school officer and I went out and purchase steel level 3 plates from AR500, I thought it was a great deal, $350 with shipping. I wore it for about a year , with all 4 plates coming in at 39lbs. I am now placing my order for 3A+ from safe line and I believe it will be a fantastic switch for me, I recommend everyone to go 3A+ from the start.

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      If you want rifle protection, you'd be better served by L210s.

  • @steelman134
    @steelman134 Před 5 lety +6

    Viewers probably play escape from tarkov

  • @seanvv7598
    @seanvv7598 Před 6 lety +15

    Spartan armor AR500 level 3 front back and sides with carrier... $175.... Sooooooooo... Jus sayin.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 6 lety +15

      Very minimal coverage area, very minimal rifle level protection, and over 20lbs...... Soooooo.... Just sayin...don't be an airsoft commando.

    • @dragoneye6642
      @dragoneye6642 Před 5 lety

      @@freefieldtraining ya but it's better thin nothing at all your pussy ass soft armor is not going to save you from 556 round which there are millions of AR'5 and other more powerful rifles to America today and there's more people living outside city limits thin in the city that carry high caliber rifles in there truck (so ya suck on those eggs lol 😂 just playing with you with this last part)

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 5 lety +2

      AR 500 armor won't save you from the most common ar15 rounds.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 5 lety +2

      That's kinda complicated. As with everything mantras like "speed kills" and "shot placement is key" don't tell the whole story and generally are a big tell that someone is only regurgitating what they have heard others say about firearms. Level 3 means that the armor (with a bunch of unrelated qualifiers) can stop 308 ball. This does not mean it will stop all 223/556 rounds because some of them are faster than ball 308 and some of them are constructed differently. Most steel armor that is "rated level 3" won't stop fast 55 gr ball like m193. And many polyethylene level 3 plates will stop m193 but won't stop m855 because of the steel tip construction. While speed plays a huge part in armor penetration construction does as well. To what part they play a role depends on what armor you are talking about.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 5 lety +2

      Lots of this stuff is not cut and dry. We have several videos on the channel of us shooting armor of various types and I've shot LOTS more armor at work. It is always a blast to see what this stuff will actually do when you shoot it.

  • @KZNer_Drag0n
    @KZNer_Drag0n Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for answering a question I had! I had always wondered whether or not me as a civilian should get 3A or level II, but you said that it's rare I'll ever encounter a 44 or 357, so level II seems like the better choice since it protect against many common caliber and the bonus is it's probably lighter and more concealable as well.

  • @onturrage495
    @onturrage495 Před 6 lety +1

    Quite informative. As a result, I will buy two steel plates to use with my level IIIA range vest. My range vest has a plate pouch on both sides. The vest you used in this video, I like all the pockets it offers. Many thanks.

  • @JulyFourth1776
    @JulyFourth1776 Před 5 lety +3

    I have both soft and hard armor, so yeh me????

  • @rurikvolkov2810
    @rurikvolkov2810 Před 7 lety +7

    I've met people who want a slab of titanum like 14by18 like 3/4 tick to put in a vest
    me im not getting shot at by anyone with a 50BMG so

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +2

      +Blayne Peterson we used to have titanium plates in vests they weren't the best.

    • @rurikvolkov2810
      @rurikvolkov2810 Před 7 lety

      free field training well titanium is super strong and is bulleproof but it absorbs nothing
      but if I was getting shot at by some gaint gun thats what id want because its just so strong

    • @Tremulousnut
      @Tremulousnut Před 7 lety

      Titanium is good against pistol, but they suck as rifle plates. There's a lot of misconceptions about it, which makes people think it's adamant when it's a very niche material.

    • @allenmitchell8846
      @allenmitchell8846 Před 5 lety

      If you do get shot with a.50, at least it will be a quick death.

  • @brucecook502
    @brucecook502 Před rokem

    About 20 years ago I had a surplus police level 2a vest, and I did test it with my 22LR rifle with Federal copper jacketed hollow-point at up to 1280 FPS, and I remember when I went to retrieve the bullet from the vest, I counted 18 layers of Kevlar, and the 22 penetrated into the 11th layer, that made me wonder how the heck it was supposed to stop larger common handgun rounds when it literally penetrated more than half the vest.

  • @briankern6644
    @briankern6644 Před 7 lety

    I have spent 10 years in the armed security field in Texas. I agree with your assessment about guards worried about rifle threats, I never encountered any bad guy toting any type of long arm besides sawed off shotguns, and .22 rifles which can be stopped by kevlar. The thing I most commonly saw where handguns, knives, bludgeons, improvised weapons, and poorly trained attack dogs.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +1

      +Brian Kern "poorly trained attack dogs" god, ain't that the truth. Lol

  • @SuperLocoloco69
    @SuperLocoloco69 Před 7 lety +6

    in chicago criminals are using high capacity rifles.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +5

      +SuperLocoloco69 Lol, yeah that makes the news but it isn't the norm at all.... I'm kinda.... There. Occasionally you'll get a drive by where some mope will let off fifteen or twenty 7.62x39 rounds at a house or car. But that isn't what they are pulling out their pants on a street stop.

    • @p51mustang24
      @p51mustang24 Před 5 lety

      You need to make a rational decision based on knowledge and statistics of REALISTIC threats. Crimes with rifles, let alone AP rounds are pretty rare.

    • @wkn123456789
      @wkn123456789 Před 5 lety

      Whats a high capacity rifle?

    • @Oscarcode1033
      @Oscarcode1033 Před 5 lety

      @@wkn123456789 maybe 30 round magazine or more

    • @constantinevx
      @constantinevx Před 5 lety

      I live in Chicago, they do not carry rifles like that. If anything they may have a submachine weapon in their vehicle. They are carrying some sort of pistol.

  • @johndavis9487
    @johndavis9487 Před 6 lety +9

    Has anyone used the Dragon Skin body armor?

    • @cherishporter5314
      @cherishporter5314 Před 6 lety

      JOHN DAVIS man I wish but I'm fairly certain that's only for the US Military and it's not something that they sell to civilians but I could be wrong?

    • @Unicorn161
      @Unicorn161 Před 5 lety +4

      Cherish Porter It's sold, but it's very expensive and more importantly it's garbage. It failed every test the Army and the Marines did. The Army failed it first. Then the Marines in a separate test (and remember they are using a totally different vest and helmet than the Army now, as well as totally different packs and load carrying gear). Then after Pinnacle whined to Congress and made a stink to get public opinion on their side, Congress mandated the Army do another test, with a huge amount of Congress watching over their shoulder along with their hired experts. It still failed.
      It couldn't handle the extreme heat of being inside an armored vehicle in the desert. It couldn't handle being soaked in POL... Petroleum, Oil, Lubricants... things that mechanics as well as vehicle crews (tankers, crews on the Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle or Bradley Cavalry Fighting Vehicle, crews on self propelled artillery, cres on the Strykers, drivers and TOW gunners on the uparmored humvees, MRAPS, Armored Security Vehicles, combat engineers in 113s or bradleys, or AVLB or AVLM, and so on and so on) are exposed to.

    • @libertardsbeware4180
      @libertardsbeware4180 Před 5 lety +4

      Well, Dragon Skin actually doesn’t work properly. These ceramic things are even if stopping debris - they are taking 50-75% of debris’ kinetic energy, making local internal harm - lungs can collide with ribs and have permanent damage. Pneumothorax and wrong syringe use may lead to death. Well, maybe it would work with two layers of thin steel and Twaron/Kevlar between them, because steel deforms, not breaks in path of bullet, while Twaron takes and catches microdebris.

    • @Unicorn161
      @Unicorn161 Před 5 lety +1

      I forgot the price. At one time a comete vest was a little over $5,000. The front and rear plate sized pieces about $2,000.

    • @how_to_hallagon1
      @how_to_hallagon1 Před 5 lety +1

      They went out of business. The military said they don't work and couldn't get a contract with them as a supplier.

  • @jaleelringgold9564
    @jaleelringgold9564 Před 6 lety +1

    I'm not a LEO nor am I security officer but this video should be revised due to the fact that rifle caliber handguns are be coming a popular thing

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 6 lety +1

      +Jaleel Ringgold They are no more popular than they were five years ago and they are not concealable nor are they used very often in crime. What you are worried about is truly a statistical anomaly just like rifles being used in crime are a statistical anomaly.

    • @jaleelringgold9564
      @jaleelringgold9564 Před 6 lety

      free field training True. I just thought it was a good point to be made

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 6 lety

      +Jaleel Ringgold If they were the same size as say, a glock 17 or even an uzi pistol or tec 9 it would be. But, Draco pistols are just not much smaller than folding stock rifles.

  • @toddjones2840
    @toddjones2840 Před 5 lety +4

    "My 600 dollar armor is better than your 4 plate 130 dollar armor" sounds like a pissing match to me, good vid tho

  • @abrahamlincoln7766
    @abrahamlincoln7766 Před 5 lety +4

    Who else notice the crazy amount of edits in this video

  • @vascodegama5829
    @vascodegama5829 Před 7 lety +22

    Ummm Round not Rond nose...

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +17

      +vasco de gama Yeah, several people have pointed that out. In my defense it was 3am when I made this.... And I can't spell for shit.

  • @aky19832001
    @aky19832001 Před 5 lety +1

    This is great for people who work in convenience stores as well.

  • @a.t6066
    @a.t6066 Před 5 lety +2

    For those in the comments, 5.7x28 out of a carbine barrel is completely different from 5.7x28 out of a pistol barrel

  • @SlimeBoy1231
    @SlimeBoy1231 Před 7 lety +12

    Why don't any companies make body armor pants? What if you get shot in the leg?

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +23

      +DJ Moore they are made. They suck to wear.

    • @trevoranderson7182
      @trevoranderson7182 Před 6 lety +10

      Imagine running around with unbreathing garbage bags strapped to your legs. On top of that, you've strapped several sandbags to your legs and belt. Sure, it feels like almost nothing at first but then try to run around with them in the hot sun. Even if for a few minutes, I'm in really good shape but still ended up with some really sweaty legs.

    • @busara45thevillain22
      @busara45thevillain22 Před 6 lety +7

      DJ Moore they'd make your butt look big. What about that one? he's got nice glutes! Aim for his ass!

    • @somedaysuperhero2184
      @somedaysuperhero2184 Před 6 lety

      Working on it!

    • @ciaoking1227
      @ciaoking1227 Před 5 lety

      Getting shot in the leg is not a life threatening injury. Body armor is supposed to keep you alive.

  • @Highclasslowlife5150
    @Highclasslowlife5150 Před 7 lety +30

    What in the hell happened to the back of your head? Lol

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +43

      +Justin Finch ttragic knife fighting accident.

    • @janglenutter3820
      @janglenutter3820 Před 7 lety +39

      Sounds more like a "hold my beer" moment.

    • @usopp2683
      @usopp2683 Před 6 lety

      free field training wow that’s not funny

    • @lemius6154
      @lemius6154 Před 6 lety +1

      whats the story behind that? lmao

    • @Migger_29
      @Migger_29 Před 5 lety

      Justin Finch nice troll. I r8 the b8 8/8 m8.

  • @Loadrunner620
    @Loadrunner620 Před 3 lety

    Common rounds in Baltimore City: 22LR up to 12 gauge and AR15 pistol

  • @sumanghosh-pb3dw
    @sumanghosh-pb3dw Před 2 lety

    0:26 - National Institute for Justice (NIJ) sets standards 4 all body armor sold in the U.S.
    1:08 - IIA grade stops 9 mm......40 S&W...
    1:42 - II 9mm....357 mag
    2:14 - IIIA...357 sig......44 mag.....

  • @vradic03
    @vradic03 Před 7 lety +7

    police in my country don't wear any body armor

    • @coolmansasoo7
      @coolmansasoo7 Před 7 lety +4

      It looks like they do buddy www.indiedb.com/members/srb-hawkeye/images/exercise-of-serbian-police-units5

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +17

      +VR P sucks for them.

    • @vradic03
      @vradic03 Před 7 lety

      St. John Smith we have patrol and rapid response police. Only the rapid response police wear body armor.

    • @vradic03
      @vradic03 Před 7 lety

      and they usually keep it in the trunk and put it on when needed

    • @vradic03
      @vradic03 Před 7 lety +1

      Jimmey303 we are not the richest country in the world, and the police is a complete mess. 26000 police officers on 7000000+ people !
      We have shit cars: www.google.rs/imgres?imgurl=https%3A%2F%2Fcdn.inserbia.info%2Ftoday%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2013%2F06%2FInSerbia-Serbian-police-car-650x487.jpg&imgrefurl=https%3A%2F%2Finserbia.info%2Ftoday%2F2014%2F06%2Fserbia-84-car-accidents-in-one-day-one-dead%2F&docid=N-F6-LAIlWBpcM&tbnid=5TVwJr90MsYZoM%3A&vet=1&w=650&h=487&client=ms-android-prestigio&bih=511&biw=360&q=serbian%20police%20car&ved=0ahUKEwiJ9a2DkKjSAhVBOxQKHcM9DrgQMwgoKA8wDw&iact=mrc&uact=8
      And shit guns: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zastava_CZ_99

  • @mattconnolly169
    @mattconnolly169 Před 4 lety

    I recently bought a point blank level 2 soft body armor a lot more lighter and comfortable than the plate carrier with level 3 plates

  • @Superbus753
    @Superbus753 Před 4 lety

    When we are on guard duty or patrolling (Swiss Military so we never are in a area with an active conflict or ever see action) wear a vest that protects our full upper body also covering our neck and extending down lower than our hips. These vests themselves are rated level 4 but can be reinforced with additional hard plates (which we don’t always have to carry them). So even though we never have to fear to be ever shot at we carry much more protection than any police force that actually see action.

  • @appleseedfanatic
    @appleseedfanatic Před 4 lety

    So if someone created clothes armor. They could use 3a+ for torso, back, sides while using level 1-2a for the sleeves, shoulders and and pants areas for almost full coverage. You'd need helmet and face shield for full body

  • @patricklandor47
    @patricklandor47 Před 3 lety

    I use military grad plates in my plate carrier. As a security contractor I find it nuts that I need this at work in the states. Yet everyday I’m sweating in it. Plates plates plates!!!!! Hard body.

  • @davidd.7251
    @davidd.7251 Před 2 lety

    Great job! I incline for a Safelife Defense. Expensive but the words “you get what you pay” can’t be more important than when it comes to life or death matters.

  • @swanpoll
    @swanpoll Před 6 lety +1

    Not buying myself a plate until a 20mm Vulcan bounces off my chest like I'm superman.

  • @tomkat1004
    @tomkat1004 Před 6 lety +1

    welcome to arizona outer plate carrier at a surface gold mine only 2 miles off a dirt road from a public shooting range

  • @TheAngrySecurityGuardChannel

    I was actually talking to a cop buddy of mine yesterday. We used to work together. He had a good point. What is the point to having vests that are not made for rifle rounds because the common weapon used in AS events are usually long guns. I prefer plates that’ll stop, hopefully, an AR round.

  • @eziahjohnson167
    @eziahjohnson167 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the info I just bought 1 front plate of soft Armor and I’ll be buying another one soon

  • @kevinguffey1564
    @kevinguffey1564 Před 5 lety +2

    Body armor is the reason why i reccomend head shots

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 5 lety +1

      Head shots not nearly as reliable as the internet cool guys suggest: czcams.com/video/zFtILkXcPA4/video.html

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      1: Headshots usually don't do it all that well
      2: You give up reaction time.
      3: You are prone to missing.

    • @SylentONE
      @SylentONE Před 4 lety

      Better hope you don't miss

  • @p51mustang24
    @p51mustang24 Před 6 lety +2

    What’s the best kind of armor to stop a time bomb?

  • @FreedomsLife1776
    @FreedomsLife1776 Před 5 lety +2

    I’m buying some soft armor now because of you.

  • @dakshitha92
    @dakshitha92 Před 5 lety

    Thanks brother. Really helping me with my PhD thesis

  • @cookimonster6156
    @cookimonster6156 Před 2 lety

    I've been working security for years and just recently have I gotten my first death threat so I went and coughed up money for a level 3A from safe life and starting bringing a taser to work. I'm not playing when it comes to my money 😁

  • @glockman9c
    @glockman9c Před 4 lety

    I run 11x14 ceramic/poly hybrid level III with 11x14 soft IIIa as a pad.
    Much lighter than level IV.

  • @thedesertwarrior7447
    @thedesertwarrior7447 Před 4 lety

    A *long time ago,* I used the useless level I. What I faced while using it assured me that I was on the losing side. Thank you for this information.

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      Hey, it's got enough to at least defeat basic handgun threats.

  • @leun6768
    @leun6768 Před 4 lety +1

    What is the best armor to buy that stops bullets, trauma attacks and knife attacks? I like the vest you are wearing

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      3A and a good quality non display medieval chestplate of at least 2mm thickness. Guaranteed to halt even broadswords. I'm not joking. Bump it to 4mm of carbon steel and you have serious chances of beating 7.62AK and other low velocity ammo.

  • @johnmerritt3331
    @johnmerritt3331 Před 3 měsíci

    Caveat....Memphis TN. 223 7.62 x 39 10 mm 40 and 9 mm with switches are very common in the criminal element.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 3 měsíci

      You might want to check out these new vests that stop 223, 556, and 7.62x39. Handgun rounds tend to bounce off as well. Awesome stuff, but a bit pricey. czcams.com/video/7qL8s_DpUDc/video.html

  • @dampdude1811
    @dampdude1811 Před 3 lety +1

    Man, youtube is suggesting some serious boogaloo vids after the DC incident.

  • @anonymouslee2083
    @anonymouslee2083 Před 2 lety

    FRAS or dragon scale style armors are pretty good. They can stop AR and AK pistols too.

  • @Zurtle1
    @Zurtle1 Před 3 lety

    I like iiia+ for the stab/slash protection.

  • @johnyracercat
    @johnyracercat Před 2 lety

    I took the red pill, so bullets really aren't an issue for me. Time usually slows down and I bend over backwards to dodge the bullets in slow motion.

  • @texaspride5386
    @texaspride5386 Před 6 lety +1

    Has a Armed Security Officer, do you think it’s a good idea to use exterior plate carries for protective measures. I’m in Working in Dallas TX ? What do you think?

  • @Jvk1166z
    @Jvk1166z Před 11 měsíci

    imo there's nothing stopping you from buying some ceramic rifle plates with trauma pads and getting 3A soft body armor that has plate pouches. i personally wouldn't chose steel plates due to the higher weight and threat of spalling. good, multi-hit, ceramic plates have existed for a long while now and i think they're again well worth the price. the weight is an inconvenience more than a hard problem, there's a youtuber by the name of codyslab who wore a full copper chain-mail shirt and several other weights all day, every day, for years, as an experiment to simulate how higher gravity would affect his body, and in his experience after a while he stopped noticing the over 50lbs shirt, and the other weights he was wearing. your body will adapt to the extra weight, especially if you exercise with it. if you have the money, why not, your safety is worth it. with mass shootings being a dime a dozen nowadays, and them occurring in many many places you would not expect, i think it's a reasonable concern for both law enforcement and security to want to have the ability to eat a couple completely unexpected 556 rounds to the chest. usually these cowards rely on the element of surprise, so you wont know when ones coming until it starts, and usually they'll shoot security or anyone they think is armed first if they have the opportunity. by in large, if its a serious threat, they'll be packing some pretty heavy firepower compared to your average junkie, and probably have body armor too. besides, if you eat a pistol round to the plate, between the plate, trauma pad, and soft armor, you'll be significantly less likely to contract a hearty helping of broken ribs disorder, which could also save your life. if you don't determine that to be personally necessary to you that's fair, but for me i think it's worth the extra money and weight if it could save my life when i least expect it to.

  • @hipal2271
    @hipal2271 Před 3 lety

    I wear a Safelife Defense vest. Comfortable for all day wear.

  • @jeffreykonyukhov4164
    @jeffreykonyukhov4164 Před 2 lety +1

    What about the level 3A+ safe life vest how much thicker is it than the level 3A safe life vest and is it still pretty concealable and worth it.

  • @mustangkrillin
    @mustangkrillin Před 7 lety

    Only thing I would add is that for people on a budget, steel is often among the least expensive options while offering the most protection, but it can be uncomfortable for all day wear for sure. While I'm no expert on this, I'm mainly referring to your video on stab protection, steel, or other hard armor would be best there as well. When I was in the military, me and a buddy where processing out some old IIIA (if I remember correctly) armor (to be destroyed anyway) so we tested it against our knives. Punctured right through though this was almost 10 years ago and the armor was expired so that may have diminished it's effectiveness.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +1

      +mustangkrillin steel is great if you have very little money and your primary threat is from intermediate rifle rounds. It is very heavy for the area covered. If your concern is stabbing, there are specialized stab vests out there. Some are pretty affordable. Or, you can put thin stab plates in a vest. The thin stab only plates over level 2 ballistic armor I haven't found to be uncomfortable at all.

  • @theamericancristero7390

    4:35 NIJ III does not guarantee M855. It is 6 hits of M80. A piece of AR500 steel can do that, so can most UHMWPE, the former can stop M855, the latter cannot; Also, M193 can punch the former, and usually doesn't defeat the latter. Alternatively, ceramic NIJ III whether Alumina, Boron, Silicon, whatever, will stop the required M80, along with M855, and M193.

  • @Braindoner101
    @Braindoner101 Před 5 lety

    Also I know you did say rarely will 44 mag be seen on the street, but may I be the exception? I live in Alaska. A good bit of people carry 10mm and 44 mag, but that's for most open carry people I see, otherwise for those I see printing are usually 9mm.

  • @kelleymcmahan6457
    @kelleymcmahan6457 Před 4 lety

    Ages ago when I was doing high risk work I wore a 3A under level 4 rigid. Granted it was overkill but some of the places I was working we were dealing with a rash of cut down shotguns loaded with deer slugs and that is a nasty bit of business.

  • @TheNinjasniper12
    @TheNinjasniper12 Před 5 lety +1

    Until they make soft armor that stop most rifle rounds, I'll be stick with steel

    • @KoishiVibin
      @KoishiVibin Před 4 lety

      Go ceramic. You risk your life with steel.

  • @alwaysrockn2009
    @alwaysrockn2009 Před 7 lety +1

    Totally awesome video! Thanks for putting this one together.

  • @danielbuehl432
    @danielbuehl432 Před 4 lety

    This is a great video that answered all my questions. Well done and thank you!

  • @chasemcdingleberg4164
    @chasemcdingleberg4164 Před 5 lety +2

    Whould rather get Shot with Level 1 Armour knowing IT will Go through then getting Shot without Armour. I assume the volocity of the projectile will be greatly reduced If your talking about small caliber firearms (anything smaller then a 50bmg)

    • @franklinAll8735
      @franklinAll8735 Před 5 lety

      You couldn't be any more wrong. Without any armor 9mm will just punch through leaving its Energy in the wall behind you, while wearing insufficient armor it will still punch through deformed to a very significant degree leaving all of its Energy in your body.

    • @SteeringWheelHolder1
      @SteeringWheelHolder1 Před 5 lety +1

      Well if I was forced to be shot, I would much rather have a round pass clean through me than fragment and stop in my organs.

  • @999124999
    @999124999 Před 4 lety

    One job supplies IIIA and one supplies II... Should I just wear the IIIA?

  • @stephenerpelding819
    @stephenerpelding819 Před 2 lety

    Just an observation, All the CZcams Videos where the various threat level of vests are tested. A Transparent Rubberized Bust is used which doesn't show the BFT. Ballistic Clay is more Approiate to use showing the viewers the impact on the clay from the round being fired and how much Trauma the wearer can expect to receive on their body. Clay should be used on all tests regardless of how New Advanced the Fabric Is? If an Officer has the money? Buy two Level 3A's to reduce the BFT to the body as much as possible!!! Other Products can also be used on Steel Composites to reduce or prevent Spalling and add more Stability and reduce Comprimising of Ceramic Composites due to multiple shots!!!?

  • @JulyFourth1776
    @JulyFourth1776 Před 6 lety +2

    8:00 Great point! Too many thinks they have to be iron man lol!!!

  • @keenanwalker6597
    @keenanwalker6597 Před 7 lety

    I bought refurbished soft body armor from body armor outlet. A lot of petiole get worried but refurbished is only talking about the carrier, not the armor itself it hasn't been shot ect just past the 5 year warranty and has new carrier which I'm fine with. I got level 3a for $149.

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 7 lety +1

      +keenan walker we recently shot 20 year old level 2 armor on the channel here : czcams.com/video/_sbN_Y6nnoc/video.html
      It is amazing how well even the early Kevlar vests hold up to time.

    • @keenanwalker6597
      @keenanwalker6597 Před 7 lety

      www.bodyarmoroutlet.com/body-armor/ct-cexiiia-refurb-level-iiia.html
      Think you have a second to tell me what you think? This is what I bought.

    • @keenanwalker6597
      @keenanwalker6597 Před 7 lety

      Damn just watched that video kind of worries me but I believe the vest is only 6yrs old if that I forget what it says

  • @seangreen7930
    @seangreen7930 Před 6 lety

    One thing to talk about in a future video would be spalling protection. AR 500 steel is notoriously bad at spalling protection unless it’s been treated. This treatment will also add thickness

    • @freefieldtraining
      @freefieldtraining  Před 6 lety +1

      People still buy unprotected steel? I haven't seen that crap in forever

    • @seangreen7930
      @seangreen7930 Před 6 lety

      free field training it’s still out there unfortunately. By the way I love the show and enjoy the training. I am not an LEO(at least yet) I’m in the military. LEOs are the real unsung hero’s of America and deserve the highest degree of respect. Thank you for keeping our communities, States, and country safe.