This invention relates to multi-layer ballistic armor and, particularly, to such armor, which is suitable for use as add-on (exterior) armor for military vehicles.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,523,450 discloses an add-on armor in the form of a multi-layer panel adapted for the external attachment to the bottom of a helicopter at a distance 2″ therefrom. The panel comprises an inner layer made of ceramic material, an outer layer, which may be polyurethane, and a middle layer therebetween which is in contact with both inner and outer layer and which may be of aramid polyamide.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,398,446 discloses different add-on armor arrangements designed for the attachment to a side wall of a military vehicle to provide different levels of ballistic protection. The difference in the arrangements is mainly in the number of armor layers and their location relative to the vehicle's side wall. In particular, in some arrangements where only one armor layer is used, it is mounted either directly or close to the vehicle's side wall or at a location spaced therefrom by spacers, whilst in the arrangements where two armor layers are used, one of them is mounted directly or close to the vehicle's side wall and the other—at a location spaced therefrom. In all the cases, each armor layer is comprised of tiles whose edges abut each other to define a substantially uninterrupted armor surface. The material from which the tiles are made may be any conventional structural materials with anti-ballistic properties, such as a composite ceramic material.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,221,807 discloses a ballistic armor with front and rear layers, which are spaced from each other by a spacing layer. The front layer is made of a ceramic material formed with blind holes, and it is designed to score impacting projectiles before they strike the rear layer, which functions as a main armor layer. The rear, main armor layer may be in the form of a two-layer plate in which one of the layers is made of sintered ceramic and the other layer is made of Kevlar™, ceramic matrix composite or steel.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided an armor designed for ballistic protection against armor piercing projectiles, the armor comprising a main armor plate including a layer at least partially made of a ballistic material, and an auxiliary armor plate at least partially made of a ballistic material, located in front of the main armor plate and spaced therefrom by an area, which is at least partially free of any additional layers, said auxiliary plate having through holes spaced from each other, which are free of any ballistic material.
In the present application, the term “ballistic material” means a hard material capable of ballistic performance.
The auxiliary plate in the armor of the present invention is preferably designed to deflect and initially shatter or at least destabilize at least those projectiles, among the projectiles against which the armor has to provide ballistic protection, which cannot be stopped by the main plate alone or with a surface to be protected. The main armor plate in the armor of the present invention is preferably designed to provide required ballistic protection against a wide range of projectiles including not only those which, when penetrating said auxiliary plate, have been deflected and shattered or destabilized thereby, but also against projectiles with a relatively small cross-sectional area, which have a theoretical chance to pass through a hole in the auxiliary plate without having been influenced thereby. The level of ballistic protection to be provided by the main armor plate depends on whether the surface, which the armor is intended to protect, has its own ballistic capability. If it has such capability, which may be for example in the case when the surface is a military vehicle's basic structure (made of a metal, such as steel or aluminum, with or without a laminate, such fiberglass, Kevlar™ or aluminum), the level of ballistic protection provided by the main armor plate may be lower than in the case when the surface to be protected does not have any ballistic capability.
The auxiliary plate in the armor of the present invention may be made of a solid material, such as metal. The through holes in the plate should have a cross-sectional area that is smaller than a cross-sectional area of a projectile which cannot be stopped by the main plate alone or with the surface to be protected, but that is still large enough to be felt by such a projectile, when impacting the hole. The holes may have the same or different cross-sectional shape, which may be regular, i.e. circular, oval, square, rectangular, triangular, etc., or may be irregular. The holes may be in the form of slits or the like, and their arrangement may be regular, e.g. staggered, or irregular.
Alternatively, the auxiliary plate may be a composite plate, for example, a plate having a layer of ceramic pellets held in abutting relationship by a thermoplastic or thermosetting material, where the islands of the latter material between adjacent pellets constitute the holes that are free of any ballistic material and that function similarly to the holes in a metal plate.
In the main armor plate, said layer may include a plurality of bodies and constitute a front layer and the plate may further include a backing layer. In this case, it is preferable that the front layer is designed to shatter projectiles (or their parts) penetrated or passed through the auxiliary plate, into small fragments, and the backing layer is designed to finally stop the fragments, possibly together with the surface to be protected.
In the front layer of the main armor plate, the bodies may be in the form of tiles or pellets made of ceramic material held in the layer by a non-ceramic, thermoplastic or thermosetting, material. The tiles may have a square or rectangular shape and a thickness smaller than the length of tile's sides. The tile's cross-sectional area is normally essentially greater than the maximal cross-sectional area of the projectiles for which the armor is designed. The pellets' cross-sectional area should preferably not be smaller than the cross-sectional area of a projectile which the main plate alone (or together with the protected surface) should be capable to stop. The pellets may have any appropriate shape, e.g. they may be cylindrical and some or each of them may have an external layer of a material different from that of which they are made, which material may be in the form of a coating or a shell or belt member surrounding the pellet.
The invention may be applied to various types of military vehicles and may provide ballistic protection against armor piercing projectiles of different diameters such as 7.62 mm, 12.5 mm, 14.5 mm or 20 mm.
The armor having the main and auxiliary plates according to the present invention may surprisingly have a lighter weight than the weight it would need to have in order to provide the same level of ballistic protection, if the armor was comprised only of the auxiliary plate or only the main plate and if these plates were located at the same distance from a surface to be protected, as in the armor of the present invention. Moreover, when used as an add-on armor on a vehicle's basic structure, the armor of the present invention may allow a much smaller distance between the auxiliary plate and the basic structure, than the distance it would need to have to provide the same level of ballistic protection, if the armor had the same weight and comprised only the auxiliary plate and did not comprise the main armor plate. In particular, the distance between the auxiliary plate and a surface to be protected may be decreased by 50% or even more compared to the distance which the armor would need to have in order to provide the same level of ballistic protection, if it had the same weight and included only the auxiliary layer.
The above may be partially explained by the combined effect of:
the auxiliary plate with holes, which may cause a projectile, when penetrating said auxiliary plate, to be deflected and to further be initially shattered or at least destabilized;
the spacing between the auxiliary and the main plates, which allows the deflected projectile's path to further deviate from a normal impact on the main plate, or allows the projectile's parts to be more separated in space between their impact on the main plate; and
an improved multi-hit capability, which the main plate may have due to its comprising a layer of hard bodies.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, an embodiment will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
An armor 10 schematically shown in
The armor 10 comprises a main armor plate 14 and an auxiliary armor plate 16 located in front of the main armor plate 14. The plates 14 and 16 may be attached to the side wall W by common attachment means 18 as shown in
The main plate 14 is a composite armor plate designed to stop alone, or together with the side wall W but without the auxiliary plate 16, at least those projectiles P, whose diameter (hereinafter ′dmin) is relatively small.
The main plate 14 comprises a front layer 20 and a rear, backing layer 22 bonded to the front layer. The front layer 20 comprises cylindrical pellets 30 abutting each other, made of ceramic, for example alumina, and held by a synthetic resin material 32. The ceramic pellets 30 have a diameter D′ about, or preferably greater than, the diameter dmin. For example, the diameter D′ may meet the condition: 1.5dmin≦D′≦3.5dmin. The rear layer 22 may itself be multi-layered and it may be made of aluminum, fiberglass, aramid fiber material such as Kevlar™ or a combination thereof. The plate 14 may further include a wrapping layer 26, which may also be Kevlar™.
The auxiliary plate 16 is designed to deflect and shatter or at least destabilize at least those projectiles whose diameter and length are relatively large (hereinafter lmax and diameter dmax, respectively), and which cannot be stopped by the main plate 16 alone or together with the side wall W.
The auxiliary plate 16 may be made of steel, titanium or the like, and it is formed with cylindrical through holes 19 spaced from each other to a distance smaller than their diameter D″. The diameter D″ is smaller than dmax but it should be large enough to be felt by a projectile having such diameter, when impacting the hole. The range of D″ may be dmin<D″≦dmax, preferably 1.2dmin<D″≦0.9dmax. The total area of the holes 40 may be about between 40% and 50% of the area of the auxiliary plate 16.
The distance L between the auxiliary and the main plates is about the length lmax. The distance L may be greater than lmax but it preferably should not exceed about 1.1lmax. A possible range for the distance L may be, for example, 0.9lmax≦L≦1.5lmax.
The armor as described above may be produced as a module with the auxiliary plate fixedly attached to the main plate. The module may be provided with means for mounting it on the vehicle's side wall W, which may be protected by a number of such modules.
In operation, a projectile P impacts the auxiliary plate 16 and, while penetrating the plate, is deflected (its path is deviated from the normal direction thereof) and initially shattered or at least destabilized. The destabilized and deflected projectile or parts thereof (or the whole projectile, if it is smaller in diameter than the holes of the auxiliary plate 16 and by chance has passed through one such hole), then impact the front layer 20 of the main plate 14, which further shatters the projectile or its parts into small fragments. The backing layer 22 absorbs and dissipates kinetic energy of the fragments on the protected side wall W, at which the projectile is finally stopped. If the protected side wall W is not adapted to provide a certain level of ballistic protection, the main armor plate 16 would need to be designed so that its backing layer finally stops the fragments of the projectile by absorbing their kinetic energy.
An experiment has been performed on a ballistic armor having the above described design, attached to an 8 mm thick steel (RHA) side wall of a vehicle so that the auxiliary plate of the armor is spaced from the wall to a distance 95 mm.
The armor had the following parameters:
Main Armor Plate (Module marketed by the Applicant under the trade name SMART™):
The armor weighted 94 kg/m2 and it successfully stopped, together with the vehicle's side wall, armor piercing projectiles 14.5 mm API B 32. A conventional add-on armor comprised solely of a perforated steel plate having the same design as the auxiliary plate in the armor of the present invention, spaced from the vehicle's side wall to the same distance as mentioned above, would need to have a weight at least 1.5 greater than that of the armor of the present invention, in order to provide the same level of ballistic protection. If, on the other hand, the conventional armor had the same weight as the armor of the present invention, the distance between the conventional armor and the vehicle's side wall would need to be more than twice the distance between the side wall and the auxiliary plate of the armor of the present invention, to provide the same level of ballistic protection.
Clearly, different variations and modifications may be introduced in the armor of the present invention, without deviation from the framework of its main concept.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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160843 | Mar 2004 | IL | national |