enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lamellar armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamellar_armour

    Lamellar armour is a type of body armour made from small rectangular plates (scales or lamellae) of iron, steel, leather , bone, or bronze laced into horizontal rows. Lamellar armour was used over a wide range of time periods in Central Asia , Eastern Asia (especially in China , Japan , Korea , Mongolia , and Tibet ), Western Asia , and Eastern ...

  3. Lamella clarifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamella_clarifier

    This results in the projected plate area of the lamella clarifier taking up approximately 50% of the space of a conventional clarifier. [13] [18] Plate spacing: Typical spacing between plates is 50 mm, though plates can be spaced in the range of 50–80 mm apart, given that the particles > 50 mm in size have been removed in pre-treatment stages.

  4. Plate armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_armour

    The use of steel plates sewn into flak jackets dates to World War II, and was replaced by more modern materials such as fibre-reinforced plastic, since the mid-20th century. Mail armour is a layer of protective clothing worn most commonly from the 9th to the 13th century, though it would continue to be worn under plate armour until the 15th ...

  5. Scale armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_armour

    The Scythians' horse warriors appear to have used scale or possibly lamellar armour, evident both from contemporary illustrations and burial finds in kurgans. The armour was made from small plates of iron or bronze. Due to the semi-rigid nature of the armour, the Scythian variety was made as breast- and back-plates, with separate shoulder pieces.

  6. Chinese armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_armour

    Lamellar armour was supplemented by scale armour since the Warring States period or earlier. Partial plate armour was popular from the Eastern and Southern dynasties (420–589), and mail and mountain pattern armour from the Tang dynasty (618–907).

  7. Laminar armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminar_armour

    Laminar cuirasses could be worn with lamellar pauldrons and tassets (worn with separate bracers, greaves and helm). Less common was the opposite combination of lamellar cuirass worn with laminar pauldrons and tassets. Both could be optionally worn with lamellar or laminar cod-piece and loin-guard, or even with mirror plate reinforcement.

  8. Brigandine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brigandine

    The medieval Indian equivalent of the brigandine was the chihal'ta hazar masha, or "coat of ten thousand nails", which was a padded leather jacket covered in velvet and containing steel plates which was used until the early 19th century. The skirt was split to the waist, allowing the soldier to ride a horse.

  9. Lamella (materials) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamella_(materials)

    A lamella (pl.: lamellae) is a small plate or flake, from the Latin, and may also refer to collections of fine sheets of material held adjacent to one another in a gill-shaped structure, often with fluid in between though sometimes simply a set of "welded" plates. The term is used in biological contexts for thin membranes of plates of tissue.