Going backwards.
I have long hoped that some new PPE would be developed that increased
safety for those working in HMA. Sadly, the new stuff I see on offer today is
actually a 25 year step backwards. And the 2023 revision of IMAS 10.30 on PPE is
also a significant reduction in the minimum requirement, which may have been
‘accidental’ but... *Sigh* Now I have to arise from my slumbers and blow
the dust off the old clickboard.
The Zebra “Long Fragmentation visor” shown on that link looks like a crude
copy of the original visors I made 25 years ago. These are the ones that were
refined and have since been made by Security Devices for ROFI, Forceware and
others – and which are used in almost every country.
The Zebra version is a crude copy because it has not been refined for
weight and comfort – and has had no relevant tests. The stand-off from the
wearer’s head at the sides is not flexible – so it is bound to be uncomfortable
on most heads. The claim that it provides “ballistic” protection should alert
any HMA purchaser to the fact that it has not been designed for use in HMA and
does not comply with the latest IMAS 10.30.
The vendor claims that it “protects the face of the wearer from ballistic
fragments”. As most of you know, “ballistics” is concerned with the launching,
flight behaviour, and impact effects of projectiles, so
objects that are ejected from some kind of guidance system (the barrel of a gun,
for example). Having been guided gives these objects “direction”
which increases the kinetic energy released during
sudden impact.
The “spec sheet” for Zebra’s long visor gives no detail other than a
claimed ballistic fragmentation resistance in their “in-house” tests of V50 300
m/s. If the material used is 5mm untreated polycarbonate (which used to be
required in earlier IMAS) this claim is at best disingenuous but it may be a
lie. They do not claim to have tested to NATO STANAG 2920 to find their V50, so
it could be that it achieved this result in their own, less rigorous, Durban V50
tests. The best that 5mm untreated polycarbonate can do in a genuine and
independent STANAG 2920 test is between 250 and 280 m/s (the nature of the
material and permitted variations in fragment design explains the range). If
they did not test to NATO STANAG 2920, you cannot compare the performance of
their visor against others (but thanks be to the wisdom of the GiHAD you no
longer have to).
In HMA, whether the visor can stop an air-gun pellet is not very
relevant. The fragments associated with an AP blast mine have not
been “guided” so are not ballistic. To comply with the IMAS, the test of a blast
visor should involve multiple near-simultaneous strikes of randomly shaped and
sized bits of mine casing, soil and stones (some of which are very hot) tumbling
through the air at high speed. This should occur fractionally before the heavy
impact of the blast wave associated with the detonation of 240g of TNT at 60cm.
Designing a replicable lab-test with these features is challenging and the best
compromise I have come up with is too expensive. Currently, the only way to test
this is with TNT inside real mines. I have done a lot of these tests – and
always had people with me to add “independence” to the results. More important,
the visors made to my spec have done their job in a large number of real blast
events. Empirical evidence will always trump compromised testing and the best
guesses of mountain “experts”.
To comply with the new IMAS 10.30, anyone thinking of buying the
Zebra visors should ask for evidence of well designed and independent blast
testing – and should note that independent NATO STANAG 2920 test results would
allow them to make a comparison with other products. Also, check whether the
Zebra material is UNTREATED polycarbonate (because treated polycarbonate can
increase the risk of shattering dramatically). If the Zebra material is thicker
than 5mm, that is OK but the user should be aware that this increases the weight
significantly and that this increases wearer discomfort. I recommend that they
also try wearing one – and try it on a random half dozen heads. With that
head-frame, I expect that it would be rather unstable and too uncomfortable to
wear for long, but I might be wrong about that, of course.
Zebra should conduct some well designed blast tests using real mines
(with independent observers) before they even think of selling to HMA
customers...but will they?
Well, HMA purchasers should insist if they want to comply with IMAS
10.30. And the dear ol’ GiHAD should work out the details of a
variables-controlled blast test that is easily replicable anywhere in the world
so that the relative performance of products can be realistically assessed. Good
luck with that! Meantime, thanks for leaving it to the “procurement” people to
design and organise comparative blast tests before purchasing something that is
cheap and which the vendor says is really good. I hope most of them will be wise
enough to stick with what is known.
*Sigh*
Back to the cowboy days.
Funny old roundabout world.
Regards,
Andy