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Body Armor Update

I was very lucky, actually. We had a traffic stop…and I initially thought the guy was in need of medical attention. He had blood on his face, he was drooling, vomiting, and I kind of looked over the car a little bit and said, ‘Hey, are you okay?’…. He had a .45 right under his leg…he pulled it out and shot me once in the chest. Luckily, I was wearing my body armor…. It was a dead-on heart shot…it saved my life.”To get more news about bulletproof zone customer service, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

Accounts like this one from Kyle Russell, a K-9 police officer with the Alexandria (VA) Police Department, of random attacks against police officers are becoming increasingly common. For many officers like Russell, body armor makes the difference between life and death.

State of the Industry

While there hasn’t been a revolution in body armor technologies over the past year, industry experts agree that there have been incremental improvements in the overall weight and bulk of body armor solutions. “The reduction of weight and increased performance of body armor has been due to the advancement of Ultra-High Molecular Weight PolyEthylene (UHMWPE) materials like Dyneema®. Officers today are seeing the lightest and highest performing armor in the history of body armor,” says Michael Foreman, EVP of International Business Development, Federal Sales and Marketing, Point Blank Enterprises.

“Achievements continue to be realized in the ongoing quest for thinner and lighter armor which maintains, or exceeds, the expected protection levels,” says Georg Olsen, Sales Manager at U.S. Armor Corporation. “When their armor is fitted properly and tailored specifically to them, officers can no longer use the excuse, ‘It’s too heavy and uncomfortable!’ This serves our primary goal which is to increase body armor wear rates.”

Industry Challenges

Not all changes in the body armor industry are good, however. Olsen fears that the pressure to develop new products which are thinner and/or lighter may lead to the release of substandard products. “Being ‘first’ with something is not always a good thing, and manufacturers need to be careful not to take products all the way out to the performance limits…it’s always wise to leave room for a margin of error,” he says. An influx of companies in the industry is also worrisome, he says. “I’m very concerned about the dramatic increase in new companies marketing armor products which have no longevity or background experience with these products.”

Body Armor Certification

The National Institute of Justice Compliance Testing Program (NIJ CTP) ensures that products meet stringent standards and perform as expected by maintaining a list of compliant products and provide manufacturers with statements of compliance to be placed on their products. Concerned that some manufacturers were mimicking the NIJ statement of compliance, the NIJ has now registered its new Certification Mark with the US Patent Office.

The NIJ Mark is currently in use only by ballistic-resistant body armor manufacturers and may only be used on specific models which have both demonstrated compliance with NIJ Standard 0101.06 and participated in the FIT surveillance program. (www.justnet.org/howto/NIJ-Mark.html)

“This registered mark will help officers and agencies ensure that what they require and order is in fact what they receive. Having the NIJ Certification Mark will help prevent knockoffs, protect the end-users and prosecute those who breach the market with substandard products,” Foreman says.

Even bigger news regarding the NIJ is its plan to eliminate Level IIA vest certifications by the end of the year, Olsen says. “They feel that the increase in street level firepower has created the need to raise the protection. This would create a significant issue for agencies who currently issue the Level IIA vest, including some very large agencies like the Chicago PD and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department,” Olsen adds.

Shopping for Body Armor

“Shop for ‘best value,’ not lowest price…they are often not the same thing,” recommends Olsen. “When you publish highly limiting, ‘tight’ bid specifications and award based solely on price, you cheat yourself out of the chance to compare several product offers and select what’s best for your agency.”

Be sure to test and evaluate prospective body armor purchases and confirm their technical data, Foreman says. It is a misconception that all published data and specifications are accurate.

Olsen concurs, “I have also noticed a highly disturbing trend of ballistic plates being marketed which imply they will do things they cannot do. In-house testing by the manufacturer is not the same thing as testing by an NIJ Certified Laboratory, and documentation should be required.”

Olsen and Foreman also agree on the importance of insisting that vendors have proof of product liability insurance. “Be sure that the supplier has current and sufficient liability insurance coverage; require that it provide a Certificate of Additionally Insured,” Olsen says. The product manufacturer should also have and maintain ISO Certification of its manufacturing and business processes during the entire useful lifespan of the armor you are purchasing, he adds.

buzai232 Jan 6 '23, 08:34PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

BulletSafe's INCREDIBLE Bulletproof Vests and Products

American Airlines Flight 191 crashed in Des Plaines, Illinois, due to a faulty maintenance procedure before takeoff. 273 people died.To get more news about bulletproof zone, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

In 1981, an elevated walkway collapsed in a Hyatt Regency Hotel in Missouri due to an engineering error. 114 people died.

In 2021, a condominium in Florida collapsed—partly due to poor safety inspection practices—killing over 100.

A list of human-error related engineering mistakes and disasters could fill thousands of pages. Manufacturers and various companies make mistakes and people die.

Due to the imperfect nature of human endeavors, government standards exist for all consumer products and services in the United States. Whether it’s the Food and Drug Administration verifying the safety of food, the National Highway Traffic Administration certifying the safety of automobiles or doctors being reviewed by State Medical Boards, every profession has standards its practitioners must comply with, and live up to, if they want to continue doing business in their industry. It’s the law.

In the world of personal-protection consumer products, such as bulletproof vests, shields, helmets and the like, the National Institute of Justice (NIJ)—an agency within the Department of Justice—is the regulating authority. Only the most durable, quality and proven bulletproof vests earn the elusive NIJ certification.
Firearms were first used in combat around the 800 years ago. Back then, there was heavy metal armor plating that could provide varying degrees of protection, although it was generally bulky, and if a soldier fell in a body of water, they were certain to drown. Over time, guns have become exponentially stronger, and the need for adequate physical protection has increased in parallel.

The first commercially available bulletproof vests were made of silk circa 1900. Fourteen years later, during World War 1, the need for widely available body armor only increased. Unfortunately, most soldiers of that era never received the protection they needed.

During World War 2, flak jackets became popular in the military, but they still failed to prevent bullets and shrapnel from doing extreme damage. It was becoming increasingly clear bulletproof vest technology was failing to keep pace with the destructive power of firearms and artillery.
Flak jackets became more advanced by the Vietnam War. They weighed about 22lbs and consisted of heavy armor plates woven together by strands of ballistic nylon, providing nominal safety from shrapnel and small-arms fire. However, they could not generally stop rifle caliber bullets.

Kevlar, a heat-resistant plastic, first became available to the public in the early 1970s. Marketed as “tougher than steel”, Kevlar dominated the bulletproof vest industry for the remainder of the 20th century.

At the turn of the century, enterprising engineers began to realize the shortcomings of Kevlar and traditional bulletproof plates. A Kevlar bulletproof vests’ average price tag was over $1000, and it was still too heavy and failed to stop high-velocity rifle calibers.

Soon enough, some inventors realized they could make bulletproof materials from aramids which are heat-resistant, synthetic fibers. Along this line of thought, a brand-new, thermoplastic polymer became widely-known and available: polyethylene. This material was stronger, lighter and more cheaply manufactured than Kevlar.

Nowadays, every top-notch bulletproof vest is made, at least in part, by polyethylene. The viability of new materials continues to be explored (firearms continue to become more powerful). Most new vests also have polyester components, which is a strong fiber that can be used to hold the plated sections of a bulletproof vest together.

buzai232 Jan 6 '23, 08:05PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

New York's Body Armor Ban May Be Stupidest Gun Legislation Yet

It's usually best to not delve into politicians' motivations lest one end up stupider for the effort. Nowhere is that truer than in the bills signed Monday by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) that, among other foolish restrictions, ban the acquisition of body armor by anybody outside of a few favored, government-controlled professions. These protective devices, incapable of offensive use unless thrown especially hard, are now unavailable for legal purchase by New Yorkers seeking even the most passive means of defending themselves and their loved ones.To get more news about hard armor panels, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

"As in far too many other mass shootings, the gunman in Buffalo went into the store wearing a bulletproof vest so he would be safe while he slaughtered innocent victims," insisted Assemblyman Jonathan Jacobson. "Unless your profession puts you at risk of gun violence, there is no reason you need this kind of body armor. This bill will help keep bulletproof vests out of the hands of those who want to protect themselves from law enforcement or other security officers while harming others."

It's true that the mass-murderer at Tops supermarket in Buffalo wore body armor, as have several other criminals in recent years. The same factors that drive sales to the public at large, specifically the ability of armor to protect users from injury, make the product unavoidably attractive to people who intend harm.

A veteran Marine and former police officer in both Wyoming and Iowa, Waldrop started his company to make body armor for his fellow law enforcement officers and servicemen and women," according to a January 2021 report from Iowa's WOI about RMA Armament Inc. "And until March of 2020, 80% of his sales were law enforcement and defense contracts. The rest he said was often to veterans or tactical gear enthusiasts. Those figures are now flipped."

Company CEO Blake Waldrop attributed soaring sales to economic uncertainty and social unrest. The public wants to protect itself against the criminals who are part of that social unrest, while criminals want to protect themselves against members of the public defending themselves and against police who might, on occasion, care to intervene in crimes. New York's new law would ban body armor sales on the grounds that armor plates are sometimes used by bad guys as well as the good ones. It's the same moral cooties theory of legislation that drives gun control laws, but this time applied to passive protective devices. At the risk of giving anybody ideas, the same arguments might well apply to the cars criminals drive or any first aid gear they might carry.

Until now, the only state with body armor restrictions beyond penalizing their use in crime was Connecticut, which requires that transactions take place in-person. "It is a class B misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment for up to six months, a fine of up to $1,000, or both, to sell or deliver body armor unless the transferee meets in person with the transferor to accomplish the sale or delivery," reads that state's law, which makes exceptions for military and law enforcement personnel.
New York's new law goes further, making it a Class A misdemeanor if people "not being engaged or employed in an eligible profession…knowingly purchase or take possession of a body vest." As in Connecticut, the law exempts military and law-enforcement personnel and "such other professions designated by the Department of State."

Incidentally, New York and neighboring Connecticut both already have plenty of experience with performative and unenforceable laws seeking to restrict self-defense rights. When Connecticut in 2013 required the registration of military-looking semiautomatic rifles tagged as "assault weapons," compliance never got higher than about 15 percent. The next year, a similar law in New York scored about 5 percent compliance. It's obvious that many Americans aren't impressed by lawmakers and are unwilling to go along with their dictates.

buzai232 Jan 6 '23, 07:56PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

Why are there no bad reviews for bulletproof vests on Taobao?

At the application level, no matter how the merchants boast, you can hardly find its landing scene.To get more news about bulletproof level 4, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

You can't always say that the purpose of buying body armor is to prevent being shot by gangsters with AK in the rice roll shop. This statement is to question the public security organs at all levels and the good social order that the public security police have worked hard to maintain over the years, and their hearts can be punished.In fact, it can be seen from Taobao's buyer show that, in some cases, buying body armor may simply be because of domestic violence.

Every family has its cupboard. Some people live their lives outside, driving Prado to the construction site all day long, and dispersing the leaders at the dinner party. But once he got home, if he didn't deal with it in three words, or if he didn't wash the dishes, he would be stabbed in the waist by his partner with scissors. For the growth of the child, after bandaging, I can only choose to swallow it up.Just like a pediatrician, facing some parents, it is not good to prescribe too much medicine, and it is not good to prescribe too little medicine. Prescribing traditional Chinese medicine should be questioned, and prescribing western medicine should also be questioned. If you lose two bottles of cephalosporin to your child and it doesn't work, the next day, a lame uncle might stab you with a pitchfork.

He called you Doctor Wang, and as soon as you turned your head, three big holes appeared in your stomach. Blood was pouring out, and the head nurse started screaming.

Therefore, it is well-founded and convincing for doctors to buy body armor.For example, some people buy bulletproof vests for the sake of their brothers - in fact, this is a backward way of socializing, and it belongs to the target of anti-crime.

You were stabbed for your buddy, you were hospitalized, and your buddy took your social security for cigarettes. You enter the number, and the buddy will fall in love with your cousin outside. Totally unworthy.Others buy body armor to protect themselves during fights. In fact, this is not good, this is only equipment theory.

There used to be people like this in our school. For the sake of prestige, I went to the hardware store to find someone to weld a knife for two hundred dollars, and the boss went to the school because the credit was not paid. When the dean found out, he grabbed the man's hair and beat him all afternoon. Guan Dao was also confiscated by the physical education teacher.But among all the buyer shows, the most moving ones are the consumers who say they have personally tried the bulletproof effect. Among them, some people also specifically warned that the body armor plus steel plate can prevent 7.62 mm steel core bullets.

We dare not rashly speculate on where and what conflicts and sorrows these buyers have experienced.

Maybe he was involved in a land dispute in the county. He was attacked with an air gun by the underworld forces next to the plastic runway of the Palace of Culture in the evening. Because he wore a body armor, he saved his life. After the crackdown, when the county TV station interviewed him, he said, thank the leaders and Taobao for calling the shots for me.

buzai232 Dec 7 '22, 08:37PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

was fatally shot when he and friend tested bulletproof vest

Police say the 16-year-old boy who was shot and killed earlier this week at a mobile home park had engaged in a testing exercise that went horribly wrong. He and a friend fired gunshots at each other to determine whether a bulletproof vest worked. When Christopher Broad was wearing the vest, one of the shots missed the protective cover.To get more news about bulletproof level 4, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

Belleview Police officers arrested the accused triggerman Thursday. He is charged with aggravated manslaughter of a child with a firearm. A second defendant is charged with making a false report.

Both of the defendants are age 17. Because they are juveniles, the Star-Banner is withholding their names.Belleview Police Sgt. Michael Miley, a detective, said in his report that officers were called to 10468 SE 52nd Court shortly after 7 p.m. on April 3. An officer entered the residence and saw Broad on the floor with a gunshot wound to the chest.

The accused shooter was performing CPR, according to Miley's report. He later died at HCA Florida Ocala Hospital, formerly known as Ocala Regional Medical Center.

Initially, police were unable to get any information because the alleged shooter was "distraught," the report said.According to police, the boy accused of making a false report initially told a 911 operator that unknown people had shot at the residence and hit Broad in the chest. He told 911 that he did not know how many people were involved, and that the bullets came through the residence.

Miley later interviewed the teen, according to the report. He was treated as a witness, since at the time officers did not know what had happened.The boy said they were hanging out and two other friends came by. The teen said Broad put on a bulletproof vest and asked to be shot.

The boy said they have fired at the vest in the past. He said one of the boys agreed to be the shooter and fired several shots at the vest. He said Broad fell.

The boy said he removed the vest from Broad and saw he had been shot in the chest. He said the two boys who had come to the residence then left.Miley went to the hospital to talk with the alleged shooter, who also was treated as a witness.

Both defendants charged in connection with a fatal shooting in Belleview have bonded out of the Marion County Jail.
That teen said that, while at the incident location, he heard gunshots, grabbed a gun, and fired a shot at a vehicle that was driving away, according to the report.

He said two other males who were at the home left after the shooting.

The boy said the gun he fired belongs to his father, who leaves it at the residence so he can protect himself.

The detective was able to find one of the males who was at the residence and interviewed him. That witness said he and another friend were at the incident location. He told the detective he did not see the shooting.Miley found the other friend. He said the teen arrested for the shooting showed them a gun and a bulletproof vest. He said the shooter put the vest on and Broad fired a shot. He said Broad and the other boy then switched roles, according to the report.

The witness said he recorded both shootings on Snapchat. He said he deleted the video of the fatal shooting. The detective watched the first video, which showed Broad firing a shot at the other boy.

buzai232 Dec 7 '22, 08:30PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

Body armor bans come to the forefront

Calls for new gun restrictions inevitably follow most American mass shootings, including the one that killed 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket six weeks ago. But in the wake of the Tops supermarket massacre, legislators in several states also have turned their attention to a new target: civilian body armor.To get more news about camouflage bulletproof vest, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

Such equipment—including helmets, bulletproof vests and armor plates—is designed to protect soldiers and law enforcement officers in the line of duty. Until recently, however, no state but Connecticut had restricted how ordinary citizens buy and sell military-grade tactical gear. The armor has, critics say, empowered violent criminals—including mass shooters—to return fire at law enforcement and extend their rampages.

Over the past 20 years, sales of body armor—like sales of guns and ammunition—have grown steadily among the general population, said Aaron Westrick, a professor of criminal justice at Lake Superior State University who has worked extensively with body armor companies and law enforcement. That has complicated some procedures for police officers, who now must train to shoot around body armor, and alarmed some lawmakers and advocates, who question why so many Americans now own tactical gear intended for combat.

In Buffalo, a bulletproof vest allowed the accused 18-year-old gunman to continue his attack even after being shot by a store security guard, retired police officer Aaron Salter Jr. Salter was among those killed. According to the Violence Project, a nonpartisan research center, 21 mass shooters in the past 40 years have worn body armor.

“The shooter in Uvalde had it, in Buffalo, in Aurora, in Boulder, in Sutherland Springs,” New Jersey state Sen. Joseph Cryan, a Democrat and former county sheriff, said of the Tops shooting and other massacres in Texas and Colorado. Cryan’s proposed civilian body armor ban is in committee. “Why do we have to wait for another one?”
Lawmakers have attempted to regulate body armor before, but without much success. In 2019, Democratic U.S. lawmakers in the House and Senate proposed two separate, federal body armor bills that never made it to a vote. New York state also has repeatedly considered, but never adopted, a proposal to create a central registry of body armor sales and distributors.

This time, however, proponents have been bolstered by the back-to-back tragedies in Buffalo and Uvalde, Texas, where both gunmen wore some type of tactical gear. In Buffalo, a set of law enforcement-grade hard armor plates saved the shooter from a bullet that police say might have ended his attack much earlier. In Uvalde, the gunman wore a plate carrier vest without its bulletproof inserts—a nonprotective get-up that some legislators have nonetheless said illustrates the threat of mass shooters and body armor.

n addition to Uvalde and Buffalo, shooters recently wore bulletproof vests during the 2015 attack on a county Christmas party in San Bernardino, California, that killed 14 people; the 2017 attack on the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas, that killed 26; and the 2019 attack outside a Dayton, Ohio, bar that killed nine.

buzai232 Dec 1 '22, 08:34PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

QUESTIONING SOFT BODY ARMOR

School safety is perpetually in the news. Over the last year or so, we’ve seen an increasing number of news stories heralding soft body armor. These usually include items such as “bulletproof hoodies,” backpacks, or other bullet-resistant personal protection items for school children. Some of these pieces have been fairly skeptical—even quite critical.To get more news about bulletproof level 4, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

What all of this news coverage lacks is a detailed look at the strengths and limitations of soft body armor. Soft body armor (i.e., “bulletproof vests”) are undeniably lifesavers, with a solid track record in the field. That said, they’re designed for fairly specific applications. They do not magically stop all bullets or prevent all damage. And, most concerning, they may perform worst when faced with the threats most common in a school shooting.

First and foremost, nothing is truly 100% bulletproof. With enough bullets and enough time, every barrier fails. Although people say “bulletproof vest” and “bulletproof hoodie,” these are more accurately called “bullet-resistant soft body armor.”

Soft body armor has interwoven layers of tough synthetic fibers to catch bullets. It’s similar to how the netting around a batting cage stops baseballs.

Experts estimate that about 80% of all firearm murders are committed using handguns. As a result, people facing generalized threats (like politicians, celebrities, and police officers) often opt to wear a “bulletproof vests” designed to stop all sorts of rounds. The “gold standard” for this are garments rated “NIJ IIIA.” These are designed to stop even the largest pistol calibers, like the .44 Magnum.

Being shot with a .44 Mag is a terrifying prospect: This is a very large bullet designed to pack a tremendous amount of power. Hunters use .44 Magnums to kill elk and grizzly bears. Even polar bears—which weigh over 1,000 pounds and stand 10 feet tall when reared up on their hind legs—can be taken down with a .44 Mag.

Reassuringly, much of the consumer-grade soft body armor on the market—including the bulletproof hoodies seen on TV—meets NIJ IIIA standards. In fact, all of these garments rely on the exact same material as the bullet-resistant fiberglass that reinforces school walls.

But it’s important to bear in mind that although these are made of the same material, they behave very differently in the field. Soft body armor will stop many bullets. But it can never stop the force of the bullets’ impact—and is powerless against some key school safety threats.

buzai232 Nov 30 '22, 08:47PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

BODY ARMOR STRATEGIC REVIEW

Following the contract awards for the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency (“DLA”) Enhanced Small Arms Protective Inserts ("ESAPI") and U.S. Army Vital Torso Protection (“VTP”) ESAPI body armor plates, we have been engaged with our customers to complete the necessary product approval processes. Disappointingly, the VTP ESAPI plates have encountered a failure in First Article Testing which will significantly delay the likely approval timetable for this product.To get more news about camouflage bulletproof vest, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

Separately, we have experienced further delays in obtaining final product approvals for the DLA ESAPI body armor plates, with approvals for this product now expected in the second quarter of our financial year ending 30 September 2022 (“FY22”).Our FY22 revenue guidance included approximately $40 million of body armor revenue. In light of the above, the financial contribution from our body armor business in FY22 and beyond will be significantly reduced, with the ultimate impact, including any associated cost savings, depending on the outcome of the review process.

These issues and the strategic review are restricted to the body armor business, with the Group’s leading respiratory protection and helmet product portfolios unaffected.
Our underlying trading results for FY21 are expected to be in line with the guidance set out in the post close trading update of 13 October 2021.

We have delayed the announcement of our FY21 results, initially planned for 23 November 2021, to allow for a review of the carrying value of the assets related to the body armor business and the additional audit work arising from this post balance sheet event.

We will confirm a revised announcement date, which we expect to be in early December, as soon as practicable. We will include an update on our strategic review of our body armor business and provide updated guidance for FY22 and beyond alongside our FY21 results announcement.

buzai232 Nov 24 '22, 08:36PM · Tags: bulletproof vest

6 Things People Didn’t Know About Bulletproof Vests

Bulletproof vests – the one item in a police officer’s job that they take for granted. If more law enforcement knew a little more about the vests saving their lives, they wouldn’t be so gun-shy about using it in the line of duty.To get more news about bulletproof level 4, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

1 – They’re Not Actually Bulletproof
The term “bulletproof vests” is actually a misnomer. The vests are actually bullet resistant. The reality is that bullet resistant vests don’t protect the wearer from every threat. Nothing is bulletproof, not even a manhole cover. In an extremely minute percentage of cases, a bullet can get through a vest that’s been rated to stop them. The bullet could have a serrated edge or something similar to it. Bulletproof vests do not make the wearer become Superman.

Body armor is meant to absorb impact of the projectile. Depending on the vest’s rating it may have stronger absorption than other vests. This does not make it bulletproof. Most manufacturers avoid the term when naming vests, even when the vest is up to the highest standard.

2 – How The Fabric Stops Bullets
Body armor is comprised of very strong non-woven and/or woven ballistic fibers. The material will stop a bullet similar to how a net will stop a tennis ball or volleyball. It causes the bullet to turn, slow it down and send its energy through the whole panel. The bullet mushrooms, which helps in the process. Keep in mind that the slower the bullet is, the better off the wearer is going to be. Bullets that have a hard tip or fired at a high velocity will get through the fibers and right through the bullet proof vest.

3 – Every Single Gun Is Deadly
Many gun enthusiasts disregard the deadly potential some kinds of handgun calibers have. However, any bullet – small or large – that travels at a high rate of speed will get through body armor. Huge handgun rounds such as .44 Magnum and .45 ACP will travel at slower speeds, which allows the body armor to stop them. However, .357 SIG and 9mm guns travel at a quicker speed and can’t stop them as easily.

Important: The shells of a shotgun are very dangerous to bulletproof vests wearers because vests are not rated for these kinds of bullets. The reason? Shot shells do not have a consistent velocity.

4 – Bulletproof Vests’ Lifespan
The majority of the United States’ body armor has a standard National Institute of Justice five-year service rating. When a vest is worn each day, it loses the protective capability quicker than one that sits on a shelf. It doesn’t matter how short or long the body armor is worn, the vest should be carefully looked over for any signs of damage – creases, tears, smells and burns. If properly taken care of, the vest should last five years. Be sure to follow the care instructions. Read more about the lifespan of a bullet proof vest here.

5 – Send In The Warranty Card
Make sure that the agency fills out the warranty card to register the vest. If they don’t, be sure that you do. The reason is that during e.g. a Zylon vest recall, many companies will have a difficult time getting in touch with customers because they failed to send the warranty cards back.

buzai232 Nov 23 '22, 09:07PM · Tags: bulletproof vest