Tyler Edwards Wrote:If its super stretchy im not sure itd be very good for protection. wouldnt it shoot through you then the bullet would get sling shotted back right? Maybe i dont know what im talking about.
Firstly -- as I understand it -- it's in the form of a sort of sheet. It has height, width, but virtually no thickness. (Think of super strong, really thin, aluminum foil.)
Kevlar and carbon fiber on the other hand are in the form of a filament, which means that they can be woven into "cloth." This "cloth" can in turn be sewn in layers. That's how bullet-proof vests are actually made -- layers and layers of woven Kevlar cloth . . . sewn together.
If this graphene is as strong as it sounds, it seems unlikely that a needle could pierce a number of layers of it, and it might have to be glued together. If it's glued, I would imagine that you could think of it as a lightweight piece of steel armor plate. It would have no resiliency, and any bullet would shatter against it sending shrapnel in all directions. Kevlar on the other hand has some "give" to it, and therefore absorbs the bullets energy. Of course the wearer absorbs some of that energy as well, but at least you don't have to dig a bullet out of the wearer -- he only gets a bruise. It can be a bad bruise in some instances, but it's still only a bruise.
Current Kevlar vests (if this is what you're referring to) will not withstand penetration from rifle bullets. Interestingly enough, not even bullets from a .22 Magnum. (I don't know about bullets from a .17 HMR (Hornady Magnum Rimfire.) The .17HMR looks like a .22 Magnum that has been necked down slightly. It fires a 17 caliber bullet at a muzzle velocity of around 2,500 feet per second. The bullet weighs 17 grains. Your standard .22 Magnum bullet weighs 40 grains and has a muzzle velocity of 2,000 feet per second.
That's where the ceramic plates come in. They will stop rifle bullets (most of them anyway) after they have been slowed down by the Kevlar.
Hope this helps.
Ken V.