Tilbakemelding fra Mineryddere
Andy Smith er en av verdens ledende autoriteter innen Minerydding, og en av de sentrale deltagerene på vår utviklingsworkshop i Oslo for 3 år siden. Han har nå testet den Nye minemasken i felt i Tajikistan og her er hans tilbakemeldinger.
A couple of years back ROFI, the manufacturer of the most used
protective equipment in HMA, was involved in a workshop in Norway where
a bunch of us were involved in agreeing the spec for a revised visor. I
was sceptical beforehand, but the design team were impressive and ROFI
were on hand for manufacture, so I left feeling cautiously optimistic
when I left.
One part of the spec that I was not in full agreement with was that the
protection level of any new material used should be greater than that
offered by 5mm polycarbonate. If that could be easily achieved, that
was OK, but I felt that the material should not be allowed to dictate
the design. There were lots of problems - not least the need for
compound-curves without stretching (so thinning and stressing) any
material used.
Accident evidence (and many empirical tests) indicate that untreated
5mm polycarbonate worn correctly will protect from an anti-personnel
blast mine at 60cm. Nothing would reliably protect against a bounding
fragmentation mine (Valmara, OZM or PROM) at that distance - so this
was to be a blast visor (as required in the IMAS).
I went off and was ill for a while, and half-forgot about the whole
thing until, in Geneva earlier this year Roald from ROFI showed me a
prototype. At the same time he gave me an armour with a visor attached
to the front - an idea I first prototyped ten years ago - to comment on.
The armour with attached visor is not quite right - but the next one
could be. The main problem is that there is too much visor - making it
impossible to wipe sweat from your forehead or scratch your nose. But
the principle is sound and the protection is comfortable. Worth making
a Mk 3 design, methinks.
By contrast, the new ROFI mask is already rather good. The mask
material is a new and a very lightweight composite - offering far
higher fragmentation protection than 5mm polycarbonate. The eye-piece
is still 5mm polycarbonate. The head frame is comfortable and easily
adjusted, and the weight less than half of a conventional visor.
In brief field introductions, the deminers have all rated it highly -
including dog handlers (because voice-command is unimpeded by the
vented face). Someone did ask where I had left my bike - but I think
that a colour to match the body armour would answer that neatly.
As always, I could make minor modifications, but if you give me the
choice over whether to wear this or the full-face visors I designed
years back and which are most used in the world - I would go for
this.... but I would like to do a series of tests against a PMN at 60cm
first. This is not because I doubt the fragmentation performance of the
new material (which is easy to test in a lab) but because I seek
assurance over the performance when whacked by the blast wave and
environmental fragmentation from real mines.
No, I don't take a cut from the original design or from this. My lack
of a commercial interest is something I have consciously preserved so
that I can make comments like this without being open to claims of
having an axe to grind. As always, my interest is safety, then comfort,
then cost. I think this is so comfortable that it might be worn all the
time - (and the accident record shows that visors are not always worn
down) - and so be a significant increase in safety. The mask cannot be
raised, so is on or off - and the polycarbonate is close to the eyes so
easier to see through. The venting stops all misting - and the design
makes scratching of the eyepiece far easier to control.
Well done ROFI. Hope it costs a lot less than the Med-Eng thing.
With regards,
Andy
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