Stanag 4569 Edition 2 NATO AEP-55 STANAG 4569 is a NATO Standardization. STANAG 4569 Level 2 4569. The testing procedures of StanaG 4569 are. STANAG 4569 Level: KE (kinetic energy) Threat: bullet: Artillery Threat (FSP 20mm) I: Riffle: 7.62x51 NATO Ball (Ball M80) Distance 30m Velocity 833 m /s Angle azimuth 360 degrees Elevation 0 - 30 degrees-5.56 x 45 NATO SS109 & M193 Distance 30m Velocity 900 m/s (SS109) - 937 m/s (M193) Angle azimuth 360 degrees.
PURPOSE AND SCOPEThe purpose of this standard is to establish minimum performance requirements and test methods for the ballistic resistance of personal body armor intended to protect the torso against gunfire.This standard is a general revision of NIJ Standard-0101.03, dated April 1987, updating the labeling requirements, acceptance criteria, test ammunition, procedures, and other items throughout the standard. Revision A of NIJ Standard-0101.04, dated June 2001, provides clarification to the text, methodology and test procedures of NIJ Standard-0101.04.The scope of the standard is limited to ballistic resistance only; this standard does not address threats from knives and sharply pointed instruments, which are different types of threat.(PDF). PURPOSE AND SCOPEBallistic Resistance of Body Armor NIJ Standard-0101.06 establishes minimum performance requirements and test methods for the ballistic resistance of personal body armor designed to protect the torso against gunfire.The standard is limited to ballistic resistance only and does not address resistance from knives or other sharply pointed objects. It reviews NIJ body armor classifications, details requirements (e.g., acceptance criteria, workmanship and armor backing material), and discusses test methods (e.g., velocity measurement equipment, wet conditioning and test preparation).This standard supersedes NIJ 2005 Interim Requirements, Ballistic Resistance of Body Armor (August 2005) and also supersedes NIJ Standard-0101.04 Rev. A, Ballistic Resistance of Personal Body Armor (June 2001).(PDF). PURPOSE AND SCOPEThe purpose of this standard is to establish minimum performance requirements and methods of test for the stab resistance of personal body armor intended to protect the torso against slash and stab threats.This standard is based on technical work performed by many organizations: in the United Kingdom by the Police Scientific Development Branch, and in the United States by the National Institute of Standards and Technology and its subcontractors.The scope of the standard is limited to stab resistance only. The standard does not address ballistic threats, as those are covered by NIJ Standard–0101.04, Ballistic Resistance of Personal Body Armor.
The standard does not directly address slash threats; however, testing has shown that stab threats are by far the more difficult to defeat, and that body armor capable of defeating stab threats will perform satisfactorily against slash threats.Read or Download the (PDF). PURPOSE AND SCOPEThe purpose of this standard is to establish minimum performance requirements and methods of test for ballistic resistant protective materials. This standard supersedes NIJ Standard-0108.00, Ballistic Resistant Protective Materials, dated December 1981. PURPOSE AND SCOPE1. SCOPE1.1 Purpose. The purpose of this standard is to provide general guidelines for procedures, equipment, physical conditions, and terminology for determining the ballistic resistance of metallic, nonmetallic and composite armor against small arms projectiles.The ballistic test procedure described in this standard determines the V50 ballistic limit of armor.1.2 Application. This test method standard is intended for use in ballistic acceptance testing of armor and for the research and development of new armor materials.
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This ballistic test method is applicable to the following types of armor:a. Body armor.b. Armored seats for aircraft and ground vehicles.c. Crew station armor for military aircraft.d.
Internal and external armor for aircraft.e. Transparent armor, such as windows, windshields and vision blocks for aircraft and ground vehicles.f. Bulkhead armor for shipboard use.g. Structural or integral armor for use on ship exteriors.h.
Armor for military tactical shelters (AFWAL-TR-82-4163).i. Visors for eye and face protection.j. Armor for potential space applications.k. Armor for light and heavy combat vehicles and structures. ShotsShot SpacingNo. LevelKE ThreatBulletDistanceVelocity.IRifle7.62 x 51 NATO Ball (Ball M80)30 Metres833m/sec (M80)5.56 x 45 NATO SS109900m/sec (SS109)5.56 x 45 M193937m/sec (M193)IIInfantry Rifle7.62 x 39 API BZ30 Metres695m/secIIISniper Rifle7.62 x 51 AP (WC core)30 Metres930m/sec (51 AP)7.62 x 54R B32 API (Dragunov)854m/sec (54R)IVHeavy Machine Gun14.5x114AP / B32200 Metres911m/secVAutomatic Cannon25mm APDS-TM-791 or TLB 073500 Metres1258m/sec. Velocity tolerance is ± 20m/sec.
PURPOSE AND SCOPEThis AEP describes the system qualification and acceptance procedure for determining the Protection Level of logistic and light armoured vehicles (LAV) for KE and artillery threats. The threats to be considered are small and medium caliber kinetic energy (KE) ballistic projectiles and fragment simulating penetrators (FSP) representing artillery shell fragments, as defined in STANAG 4569 Annex A (summarised in Annex A of the AEP-55).This process includes standard techniques and reproducible test procedures for evaluating the ballistic resistance of vehicle armour components (integral, add-on, opaque and transparent) as well as the required vehicle Vulnerable Area assessment.