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Thread: Proper Wear of Armor (with anatomical diagrams)

  1. #1
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    Proper Wear of Armor (with anatomical diagrams)

    This is often a misunderstood topic so I thought I should try to clear it up a bit.

    A PDF of this information is available here: http://sixty-six.org/files/proper_wear_of_armor.pdf

    Understanding Armor and the Body

    Body armor is meant to keep you in the fight. It should protect the vital organs which, if hit, would quickly take you down and prevent you from putting rounds on target. The possibility of saving your life is a secondary benefit of body armor. With this purpose in mind we must understand those structures we need to protect which we can realistically protect while still maintaining a high degree of mobility.

    Our primary concern is the heart and the large blood vessels which sprout from the top of the heart: the superior vena cava, the arch of the aorta and the pulmonary trunk. These vessels are collectively referred to as “the great vessels”.
    The heart is important for its obvious function of providing pressure to circulate blood to the lungs via the right side of the heart and then on to the body via the left side of the heart. Within the body the heart lies left of center, with its apex near the left nipple. Thus, while fitting a plate we must select one which will cover the nipples to ensure the entire heart is protected.

    The great vessels of the heart lie directly behind the uppermost portion of the sternum, known as the manubrium, and sit directly on top of the heart. The great vessels wrap and twist around each other, making it likely that a hit to one will likely perforate another and result in massive hemorrhage.

    Arguably the most important of the three great vessels in the Aorta, due to its size and high velocity of blood flow, 5 liters a minute. The average 165 pound man has 5 liters of blood in his body and thus can completely bleed out within one minute if the Aorta is dramatically dissected. Loss of consciousness can occur with less than 40% or 2 liters of blood loss and thus can occur in well under a minute. Of equal importance to the heart is the respiratory diaphragm, the muscle which, when contracting, allows you to decrease air pressure within your lungs and thus take in air. Destroy the diaphragm and you destroy one’s ability to breath. Protecting the entirety of the respiratory diaphragm is not realistic, but the majority of it will be protected by a properly fitted plate. The diaphragm is dome shaped, following the bottom of your rib cage and doming up into the chest cavity.

    Protecting the vertebral column goes without saying -we wish to protect as much of this as possible without sacrificing mobility. Unfortunately, protecting the entire vertebral column is not realistic at this time.

    It is important to note that a hit to the lungs may prove to eventually be lethal but is not nearly as lethal as quickly as a hit to the heart and its great vessels. The liver and kidneys, while highly vascular, are also not immediately incapacitating and thus are of secondary concern. The rest of the viscera in your abdomen are of tertiary concern.


    Finding Balance: Protection vs Mobility

    A chest plate, when properly fitted, should not impinge on the anterior deltoids or pectoralis major muscles when punching out with a handgun or carbine. Any impingement on the shoulder may create discomfort, premature fatigue and possibly even aggravate certain shoulder conditions. In some cases too large of a plate may prevent a shooter from assuming an ideal hold on their weapon. This, and even discomfort, can translate to misses down range.

    A slightly smaller chest plate which fits with no impingement while punching out will not expose the heart as long as it still covers the nipples. A bit more peripheral lung tissue will be exposed along with a small fraction more of the abdominal viscera, but these are organs which can take a hit without immediate consequences to the shooter. As stated previously, a shot to the lung is not immediately fatal. A shot to the periphery of the lung certainly is not immediately fatal and peripheral lung tissue is the worst thing you are sacrificing for a better fitting plate.

    Front/chest plate

    The top of your chest plate should be at the level of your suprasternal notch, which is also known as the jugular notch. Tracing the sternum with a finger superiorly, the soft spot you reach at the top of the sternum is the suprasternal notch. If you press in with your finger and choke yourself you are in the right spot. The chest plate should ride at least level with the top of your sternum while standing. An easy way to ensure this is to place a finger in your suprasternal notch and position the plate such that the top of the plate touches the bottom of your finger.

    Reference image (anterior view)

    Red is your heart and related blood vessels
    Dark Grey/Yellow is a properly positioned plate
    The sternum and clavicle are white with black outline

    http://sixty-six.org/files/thorax_anterior.jpg


    Positioning of rear/back plate

    Find the most prominent bony eminence at the base of your neck. This is your vertebral eminence. Count down two bony spinousus (or measure down about an inch) and that should be above the level of the superior aspect of your sternum. Positioning at least this high will ensure your entire heart and the great vessels are protected from a shot to the back.

    Reference image (posterior view)

    The vertebral eminence is marked in the diagram below in blue.

    http://sixty-six.org/files/thorax_posterior.jpg

    Side plates and shoulder plates

    Side plates are intended to protect the highly vascular elements of your abdomen. They were introduced to prevent troops from bleeding out in the chopper on the way to the field hospital. Side plates were not necessarily intended to protect the heart, but if you wear them high up into your armpits you can protect some of the lower portion of your heart.

    Protecting your heart from a shot to side is accomplished by shoulder plates, such as the ones manufactured by Crye Precision.



    To sum it up

    Front plate: Even with top of the sternum while standing and covering the entirety of each nipple. For best fit, the plate should not impinge on the shoulder when presenting a weapon.

    Rear plate: Should lie no lower than an inch below your vertebral prominence. A back plate one size larger than a chest plate is optimal.

    Side plates: the higher they ride the better
    Last edited by panzerr; 08-13-18 at 08:38. Reason: update
    a former meatpuppet.

    http://sixty-six.org

  2. #2
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    Thanks for taking the time to post this, that's a very useful diagram and reasoning.

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    you bet dood
    a former meatpuppet.

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    nice! thanks!

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    Do You Mind if I steal this and post it on TOS?

    CXS
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    Edge-Works Manufacturing

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    Nice pic.

    Not sure how you sized the plate in the pic, but it appears smaller than normal sizing, and way smaller than what I want to use.

    My following comments are not directed at the OP (panzerr), but to Plate Virgins or people offering advice without wisdom earned through experience...

    I do have a concern about this trend towards smaller plates. I do not like it and feel it is dangerous for those who have never been on the receiving end and think it is what "everyone is doing."

    If one has experience with wearing armor other than for recreational uses, then they can use their judgement to make the choice and I respect that.

    Plate comfort is an arbitrary concept. It is not just the plate, but the carrier, what is attached to it, and the condition of the user. I am not concerned with plate comfort with a standard SAPI cut. Choosing a smaller plate for comfort makes about as much sense to me as changing your upper to 22LR so it has less recoil and noise.

    Most civilians have not heard the term "Mission dictates equipment" but it makes a lot of good sense. People have gone on missions with no armor, or tossed their plates down a mountain because the weight was affecting their ability to complete the mission. So, what is your mission?

    What I am concerned about is protection to the point that it interferes with my ability to fight. Plates are not static when worn, and can shift around. You want coverage that covers your vitals no matter how your body is convoluted.
    ParadigmSRP.com

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    That's a good graphic. Too often, dudes are wearing their plates too low, under the misguided idea of "comfort."

    Quote Originally Posted by Iraq Ninja View Post
    Plate comfort is an arbitrary concept.
    There's gonna be some rocks out there, so for those guys...the above statement boils down to "armor is uncomfortable." Period, end of story, foreverandeveramen.

    Folks throw the word "comfortable" around too often in regard to armor. Ain't gonna happen; it's not a Hawaiian shirt. Ya wear plates of the correct size, put them where they're supposed to go, adjust the carrier around those two requirements as best one may, and either suck it up from there or get another carrier (only if you're allowed/capable).
    Contractor scum, PM Infantry Weapons

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    Quote Originally Posted by Iraq Ninja View Post
    Not sure how you sized the plate in the pic, but it appears smaller than normal sizing, and way smaller than what I want to use.
    The plate is of no particular size, but it is of proper proportions. The diagram is only intended to show how high a plate needs to go.

    I will be doing surface projections on a live subject and using a real plate to shed more light on the subject.
    a former meatpuppet.

    http://sixty-six.org

  9. #9
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    This applies to soft panels for concealable duty armor too since your gut can survive hits much better than your high chest area.
    "What would a $2,000 Geissele Super Duty do that a $500 PSA door buster on Black Friday couldn't do?" - Stopsign32v

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    Quote Originally Posted by JSantoro View Post
    That's a good graphic. Too often, dudes are wearing their plates too low, under the misguided idea of "comfort."



    There's gonna be some rocks out there, so for those guys...the above statement boils down to "armor is uncomfortable." Period, end of story, foreverandeveramen.

    Folks throw the word "comfortable" around too often in regard to armor. Ain't gonna happen; it's not a Hawaiian shirt. Ya wear plates of the correct size, put them where they're supposed to go, adjust the carrier around those two requirements as best one may, and either suck it up from there or get another carrier (only if you're allowed/capable).
    You mean I won't forget I'm wearing it and carrying a gun?
    GET IN YOUR BUBBLE!

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