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The best bulletproof body armor when SHTF

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User is offline   xysoom 

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The best bulletproof body armor when SHTF



If things get really bad, like a sudden epidemic outbreak, it’s reasonable to think you are at risk of being attacked by other people — let alone in more common emergencies like active shooters and home defense.To get more news about ballistic helmet, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

As part of the “create holes, prevent holes, plug holes” framework of emergency combat, body armor is a core component of protecting yourself and preventing holes.

To narrow down our recommended choices of the best bulletproof body armor for preppers, we spent over 100 hours doing the work so you don’t have to — or worse, so you don’t buy the wrong thing and die. We considered over 240 different armor products and collected deep data on about 90.
Picking the right body armor is a frustrating battle of tricky tradeoffs. Steel plates usually stop one type of common AR-15 round but not the other, while ceramic plates do the inverse. Steel plates are thin but heavy. Ceramic and plastic plates are light but thick. The list of tradeoffs to consider is long.

To make matter worse, finding body armor for sale and picking the right product is more frustrating than it needs to be. There is a ton of bad info out there, with people giving dangerously wrong advice and companies making it too complicated to understand their products. Plus, the industry is a mess, with companies spreading lies about each other under false names, defamation lawsuits, and other ugly tactics.

But the market is improving, especially for civilians on a budget. Even if it sits on a shelf for 10 years until you need it, we think the $200 is worth it and that more people should consider body armor after covering their emergency preparedness basics.
Sometimes the protective part and the holder are integrated together (namely soft bulletproof vests), but for the types of armor relevant to prepping, the plate and carrier are separate and often from entirely different companies.

Soft armor (whether soft plates or soft vests) is only for knives, pistols, and shotguns. We mostly ignore this type, although it can be good for child backpack inserts or light and stealthy mild protection.
For prepping, we want to protect against rifles, too. This means you buy hard armor that you insert into a chest harness (usually called a plate carrier).
All armor is rated by level. The higher the level, the more types of ammo it protects against. All soft armor is level IIIa (i.e. “3 minus”) or below, and all hard armor is III, III+, or IV.
Level III is not good enough because it can’t stop common AR-15 rifle rounds.
Level III+ is the sweet spot for most people. Level IV is for serious preppers.
Choosing body armor is about compromise and trade offs, such as protection vs. cost vs. weight vs. thickness.
When evaluating armor, it’s not good enough to say things like, “this armor beats .223 ammo!” It depends entirely on the specific ammunition used, including how fast the bullet travels. We focus on M855 and M193 .223 ammo as the criteria for level III+.
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