h a l f b a k e r y0.5 and holding.
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I think you'll find that modern armor does rely on this kind of property, but silly putty is not something you want to put between yourself and an incoming missile. |
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The basic notion exists, albeit not in personal body armor. There is a substance known as ballistic putty which is used to stop projectiles at the back of bullet and pellet traps in target shooting as well as in crime labs for test firings. |
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Not only can you get past many levels
of security but you can also copy
sensitive documents and comics. |
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Sorry, I'm talking about the silly putty. |
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Ahah! self fragmenting armour! You'd be better filling it with custard. |
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If someone hits you with a rolled-up newspaper, not only are you protected but you can read it later. |
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arrrrggghhhhhhh custard! Why is it always custard?!?! |
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[DrCurry] "...but silly putty is not something you want to put between yourself and an incoming missile." marketing is everything, and if it doesn't work, Caveat Emptor. |
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what is it with you people and custard?!?!?!?!?!?!!?!? |
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halfbakery users are fond of custard because it is known to absorb extraneous punctuation marks. |
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I always liked the idea of body armor made with a non-newtonian fluid. It's flexible for comfort when not being shot at, but when hit essentially turns into a solid, distributing the force of the bullet over your entire body. Unfortunately, cornstarch and water (the substance I had in mind when I came up with this idea) can't actually stop a bullet without shattering like silly putty. |
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Now I've heard that the non-newtonian fluid works because fibers in the fluid can move slowly, but get tangled up when they try to move too fast. So what if we could make a non-newtonian fluid that has kevlar fibers instead of cornstarch fibers? |
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Of course there was the other slight detail of how to create the armor in such a way that the fluid doesn't all flow to the bottom. Dividing it into separate cells isn't any good because then the force is only distributed over each cell, not the entire armor. |
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the fludid running to the bottom is a simple one. you just make the internal limiting cell walls strong enough to withstand wear and tere but breakable on impact. |
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I like many of you, I had this very same theory. However, I thought about adding a suspension of synthetic diamonds (highly practical). This, again, to add more lightweight energy absorbtion, deflection and dispersion. Kevlar putey needs to be made! I don't think custard will be up to it. |
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The ARL has used rheopectic suspensions combined with woven aramid layers to improve ballistic performance - I think they worked with University of Delaware on it.
Replacing the Kevlar with silly putty and then adding Kevlar to prevent penetration certainly is a novel approach.
Might also leave a little too much momentum with the bullet too and have a problem with it ripping through the armour and one's soft parts. |
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Look up the phrase "interface defeat". It's all about having a brittle substance as the impact plate. It absorbs a large ammount of energy by shattering, and then the abblated material erodes the projectile down to nothing as it passes through. It's all the latest craze in tank armour. |
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