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  2. Ceramic armor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_armor

    Ceramic armor is armor used by armored vehicles and in personal armor to resist projectile penetration through its high hardness and compressive strength. In its most basic form, it consists of two primary components: A ceramic layer on the outer surface, called the "strike face," backed up by a ductile fiber reinforced plastic composite or metal layer.

  3. Chobham armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chobham_armour

    Spalling caused by the reflected energy can be reduced by a malleable thin graphite layer on the face of the ceramic absorbing the energy without making it strongly rebound again as a metal face plate would. Tiles under compression suffer far less from impacts; in their case it can be advantageous to have a metal face plate bringing the tile ...

  4. Ballistic plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_plate

    A ballistic plate, also known as an armour plate, is a protective armoured plate inserted into a carrier or bulletproof vest, that can be used stand-alone, or in conjunction with other armour. "Hard armour" usually denotes armour that uses ballistic plates. It serves to defeat higher threats, and may be considered as a form of applique armour.

  5. Small Arms Protective Insert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Arms_Protective_Insert

    A call for a next generation plate, to stop even greater velocity threats than the ESAPI plate was issued by the U.S. Army in 2008. [5] The X Threat Small Arms Protective Insert plates are specifically allowed scalar or flexible systems, and asked for better coverage, with less than a pound of additional weight.

  6. Ballistic shield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_shield

    Ballistic shields are similar to body armor plates in their construction, and are typically made out of fibre-reinforced plastic composites derived from ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene or aramid. [3] They may, like ceramic armor, incorporate a ceramic layer on their outer surface to enable them to defeat steel-core armor-piercing bullets.

  7. Uranium tile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium_tile

    The orange-colored tiles in the town hall in Schneeberg, Saxony are made with a Uranium glaze Green glazed tile Cream colored uranium tile. Uranium tiles have been used in the ceramics industry for many centuries, as uranium oxide makes an excellent ceramic glaze, and is reasonably abundant.

  8. Floor plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floor_plate

    Floor plate (architecture): The assembled floor within a building; Floor plate (biology): Part of the nervous system of vertebrate organisms; Floor plate (construction): Temporary flooring to support heavy work and machines during construction; Floor plate (firearms): The plate closing the bottom of the magazine recess of a bolt-action rifle ...

  9. Body armor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_armor

    Ceramic body armor is made up of a hard and rigid ceramic strike face bonded to a ductile fiber composite backing layer. [25] The projectile is shattered, turned, or eroded as it impacts the ceramic strike face, and much of its kinetic energy is consumed as it interacts with the ceramic layer; the fiber composite backing layer absorbs residual ...