
What Is A Concealable Vest Made Of?
A concealable vest consists mainly of a carrier garment and an integrated protective material. Common fabrics, such as cotton and nylon, are frequently used to construct the carrier. However, because a concealable vest is typically worn firmly against the body, the wearer will be padded with fabrics that drain away moisture and allow air to circulate. This will reduce the amount of sweat that accumulates on the wearer and keep them feeling clean and dry.
Concealable Ballistic Vest
The protective material in a concealable ballistic vest is arranged inside the carrier to protect the wearer’s essential organs, including their heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys, as well as any other organs in their torso that are essential to life. The front and the back are the typical locations for ballistic protection in a concealable vest. A wearer can choose to add side protection, and other times they will just use the front of the carrier as their primary line of defense. Soft armor is also usually permanently sewn into the carrier or stored within panels that may be removed from the carrier. These soft armor inserts are often manufactured using a para-aramid textile or Ultra-High Molecular Weight Polypropylene. The protective material forms a ‘web’ of thickly woven interwoven fibers, making it five to twenty times stronger than steel.
Depending on the level of the concealable vest, it should be strong enough to stop an incoming bullet, withstand a stab from a knife, and sometimes both of these things simultaneously. The concealable vest entangles either the knife or the bullet in the fabric mesh, preventing them from penetrating the body of the person wearing it. In the case of a bullet, the material absorbs a significant portion of the effect of the projectile and disperses its energy across the entirety of the armor. Concurrently, the material deforms the point of the bullet into a much safer, disk-like shape.
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