Improvised Counter-I.E.D. Armor |
Overview
A few years ago, a very interesting article on TechCentralStation.com entitled "Send it, and We'll Figure Out How to Use It" appeared. This article was about how military personnel are using scavanged and improvised hardware to help them when they are on the battlefield babysitting those fucking useless Eurosavages. Alot of the ideas in this article are very clever and should be looked into further.
Excerpt from "Send it, and We'll Figure Out How to Use It":
Glass Ceramics
Good old Corningware bowls bounce off concrete, but its ballistic resistance pales in comparison to the tougher stuff that glass makers transform into well named hard discs for computer memory drives. Cheap and readily manufactured, such materials approach the fracture toughness per unit weight of honest to gosh armor ceramics. Adding cesium to the precursor melt beefs up the computer grades, and mass production -- we're talking stovetops and windowpanes here -- can turn them out faster than silicon or boron carbide.
Scrap Kevlar Cloth
Any kind of aramid -- twaron, Kevlar, Whatever -- and almost any high tenacity fiber webbing or scrim, from Spectra to Nomex, are vast improvements on the lack of it for those with time and glue on their hands to reinforce their motley improvisations.
Apparently, the coatings on hard drive platters make them ideal for use as very light-weight improvised armor plating. These could be useful for protection against the metal shrapnel used in most Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) or suicide bombers belts. I doubt these will stop a 7.62x39 mm round, though. Also useful in battle, are scraps of Kevlar material. These are often "thrown away" daily in the form of cut or heat resistant mechanics gloves, Goodyear "SilentArmor" automobile tires, or even some high-performance bicycle tires (the kind that are puncture resistant). These all contain bits of Kevlar material which can be utilized as patches for real or improvised armor.

Kevlar XL Mechanic's Gloves (Harbor Freight Tools #92173) & Goodyear Fortera SUV Tires
Pictures & Notes

The two old hard drives used for this experiment. There may be a large difference in platter size and strength between manufacturers. I have no idea.

Take the hard drives apart using Torx screwdrivers and an X-acto knife. Save the controller PC board as it is a good source of surface mount components.

Hard drive internal view.

Remove the armature for the drive's magnetic head using a regular screwdriver as shown above.

Remove the rest of the mechanical pieces. The magnets on the lower-left are very powerful and can be useful in other projects.

Remove the plate which holds the drive's platters down. This is usually a small #6 Torx screw.

Then remove the individual platters. There are usually two or three platters in each hard drive.

Initial strength test using a ball peen hammer. The individual drive platters appear to be very light (0.5 oz) aluminum discs with some sort of coating. Maybe it's the coating that gives them strength?

Close up of a hammer hit on a single disk platter.

Some of the two-part epoxy resins and putties used for this test. Use the epoxy resin (left) to sandwich two disk platters together for greater strength, then use the epoxy putty to hold the improvised armor in the location you need.

Spread the epoxy resin out along one of the platters.

Then clamp another one on top of it. Let it cure for at least five minutes.

Here are three sandwiched dual-platters epoxied together. Each one overlaps, covering the center hole on the platters underneath it.

Then place them inside a Kevlar lined mechanics glove for added protection from shrapnel and fire burns.
Real World Testing

Single hard drive platter. .45 Colt 200 grain lead ball (8.3 grains Unique) on the left, .22 LR (Remington Thunderbolt) on the right.
All shots were from Ruger revolvers at 20 feet. The idea was to simulate shrapnel. All the epoxy bonds broke when hit.

Dual hard drive platters epoxied together - .45 Colt exit.

Dual hard drive platters epoxied together - .22 LR. Stopped completely.

Rear view of the stopped .22 LR shot.

A different set of dual hard drive platters epoxied together - .22 LR with the same results.

A different test with the dual hard drive platters behind a pair of heavy leather gloves - .45 Colt went straight through. The idea is that thick leather can be used to reduce or even prevent any flesh burns from IEDs.

Exit wounds.

Dual hard drive platter combination close up. Exits.

The heavy leather gloves and dual hard drive platter combination could catch the .22 LR bullets.
Send it, and We'll Figure Out How to Use It
December 21, 2004 - From: www.techcentralstation.com
By Russell Seitz
What could a soldier in Iraq possibly do with a slab of armor plate or bulletproof glass? More than a defense procurement bureaucrat in Washington; hence the wise words of General De Long, USMC, Ret. on MSNBC last week: "Send it, and we'll figure out how to use it."
He was expressing the wisdom of military experience going back to the day Ugh the Grunt discovered his trusty jade ax; besides braining cave bears, could deflect the flint spears tossed by his irascible Neanderthal neighbors.
Soon this Neolithic genius studded a mammoth hide with clamshells, and composite armor was born. Within a hundred generations, Ugh's descendants were pinching Saigon man hole covers to put under their helicopter seats, and complaining to Congressmen about late flak armor deliveries. Today, plus ca change,
Middle America has a heartening tendency to actually do things for troops in the field. When grunts wrote home noting it was 140 degrees inside their tents, but that the Revolution In Military Affairs provided them with electricity to power tactical laptops, good people mobbed Walmart's to send $99 air conditioners to the nation's sons and daughters using one of the DOD's Really Good Things : The APO . It delivers parcels, even those containing air conditioners, to war zones with FedEx speed at 4th Class prices.
So what could Santa deliver to good kids spending the holidays under fire?
The stores are bare of humvee armor kits, or this essay would be pointless. Having already exhorted the Beltway denizens to twist the arms of the Scrooges managing our stay-at-home Euroallies' arsenals, here are a few thoughts on the right stuff to fill Kevlar stockings in record time. They range from off the shelf -- or out of the scrapyard -- to industrial processes whose speed takes precedence over economy.
Hillbilly Electronic Countermeasures
The Islamists' latest attempt to blow up Pakistan's president with roadside explosives ran afoul of a handy gadget called a VIP2 Road Ranger -- an electronic jammer that keeps radio controlled bombs from being triggered while their intended target is within lethal range. The Pentagon may pay about ten grand for gold-plated Mil Spec models, but the free market price of the same technology is closer to a microwave oven -- or a gray-market traffic radar jammer.
Used Tires
Not just any ones, and not the whole donut. What's needed is a program to round up and skive off the Kevlar belts that rim the nation's mountains of balding aircraft radials. This would spare our landfills while affording ingenious Gunnies a prime raw material for spanning hard to fit gaps in improvised explosion shields.
Glass Ceramics
Good old Corningware bowls bounce off concrete, but its ballistic resistance pales in comparison to the tougher stuff that glass makers transform into well named hard discs for computer memory drives. Cheap and readily manufactured, such materials approach the fracture toughness per unit weight of honest to gosh armor ceramics. Adding cesium to the precursor melt beefs up the computer grades, and mass production -- we're talking stovetops and windowpanes here -- can turn them out faster than silicon or boron carbide.
Scrap Kevlar Cloth
Any kind of aramid -- twaron, Kevlar, Whatever -- and almost any high tenacity fiber webbing or scrim, from Spectra to Nomex, are vast improvements on the lack of it for those with time and glue on their hands to reinforce their motley improvisations.
Adhesives
Duct tape kills. If you want to save a lot of lives for a little money, fast, investing it in seriously good epoxies and elastomers with energy absorbing fillers like microballoons is a highly portable way to go. If I sent one thing to Iraq, it would be high tenacity ways and means of enhancing the bonding of the catch as catch can vehicle armor people in theater improvise.
Small Halon Fire Extinguishers
The kind you can no longer buy, because they are hell on the ozone layer. So are third degree burns on human skin. If you've got 'em, in your closet or kitchen, send 'em, They are needed and they work so well that I would not want to be the DA who tries invoking the Montreal Convention to keep them out of vehicles going in harm's way.