Postby JeanryChandler » Thu Oct 13, 2005 12:03 am
The Greeks used to make armor out of (hardened) linen, something they called 'linothorax' which replaced the old bronze body armor of the Hoplite around the time of the Theban ascendency, and was retained through Alexanders time and after. Matthew Amt (of the Roman re-enactment group Legio XX) made some and interestingly, found that it was remarkably cool, which may have been it's chief advantage.
And to Aaron, yeah I know better than to tease that guy, couple of remarks & I left when it was clear he wasn't in the mood for jokes... Suffice it to say circumstances here are rather unusual at the moment, and this was in a bar in social scene after all, he was apparently not on duty. I dont even know if he was a cop, a fed, or some kind of security guard.
Anyway, dont worry about me I'm an old conformist honest tax paying citizen these days, I have plenty of law enforcement friends.
As for Kevlar, I didn't mean better than plate armor, but those heavy flak vests we had in the Army back in the 80's were probably superior to an average aketon or jupon, I would say, in terms of absorbing blunt trauma. But I'm just guessing based on the density, and what I have seen of reproduced quilted padded armor.
Interestingly, I saw a show on Discovery channel a while back about knife attacks on police in England and their attempts to create a knife proof vest... by the end of it, they concluded that mail was actually the most effective protection they could come up with so far, by a long shot.
More proof our forbears had a lot on the ball..
JR
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger