6B3 ballistic vest

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6B3 (Russian: 6Б3) is a ballistic vest of the Soviet Armed Forces. It was the first widely issued and mass produced ballistic vest rated to stop assault rifle rounds. It was created by NII Stali after Soviet troops in Afghanistan noted the lack of protection against rifle rounds that the 6B2 ballistic vest provided.

6B3
6B3 vest
TypeBallistic vest
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service6B3T: 1983-?
6B3TM-01: 1985-?
Used bySoviet Armed Forces
WarsSoviet-Afghan war
East Prigorodny conflict
First Chechen War
Second Chechen War
War in Donbas
Production history
DesignerNII Stali
Specifications
Weight6B3T: 12.2 kg
6B3TM-01: 8.2 kg.

History

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After the Soviet army started to issue 6B2 body armor to the troops in Afghanistan, a number of downsides were noticed. Firstly, and most importantly, the vest only provided good protection against shrapnel, but not rifle rounds.[1] As such, engineers at NII Stali set out to create an improved ballistic vest, with higher protective characteristics.[2] In 1983, by resolution of the Central Committee and the Council of Ministers of the USSR NII Stali was designated as a lead coordinator of all developments in the realm of personal protection.[3]

6B3T armor offered better protection compared to 6B2 and got adopted in 1983, and modernized versions with differentiated protection on front and back and better fabric cover - 6B3TM and 6B3TM-01 were adopted in 1985.[4][5][6][7][8]

Design

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The vest consists of chest and back parts. On the shoulders they connect via belt-buckle fasteners, which make it possible to make height adjustments.[6][7]

The protection itself consists of titanium armor elements inside of the so-called mounting plate (монтажная плата). The fabric cover of the vest has four pockets for AK mags (AK stripper clips on 6B3T) on the front, four slots for hand grenades on the back, and two big pouches on front and back for other storage.[7]

Protective characteristics

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Protection of 6B3TM-01 vest consists of titanium plates inside of the aramid pockets both in the front and in the back. The front plates are made out of 6.5 mm thick VT-23 titanium, called ADU-605T-83 (АДУ-605Т-83). It provided protection against 7.62x39 PS cartridge fired from an AKM at 10 meters, 5.45x39 PS (7N6) from an AK-74 at 35 meters, 5.56x45 FMJ (M193) from an M16A1 at 100 meters, and 7.62x54R LPS from an SVD at 150 meters. The back plates are made out of 1.25 mm thick VT-14 titanium, called ADU-605-80 (АДУ-605-80), the same material as the 6B2 vest.

It could reasonably protect against TT and Makarov pistols. Both front and back were further protected by aramid (TSVM DZh-1) fabric liner (30 layers of fabric).[7][9][6][10]

There are several variants of 6B3 body armor:

  • 6B3T - (T stands for titanium) original version adopted in 1983. Offers all round protection with 6.5mm plates.[4][5][8]
  • 6B3TM - modernized version adopted in 1985. Changes were mostly done to fabric cover of the vest (Replacing pouches for AK stripper clips for AK mags pouches). Offers same protection as 6B3T. Weighs 12.2 kg.[7][5]
  • 6B3TM-01 - modernized version adopted in 1985. Has the same protection as 6B3TM on the front, but thinner, lighter plates on the back. The most widely produced variant of 6B3.[7] Weighs 8.2 kg.[6]
  • 6B3TM-01M - upgrade of existing vests by "Zyuratkul" company in the 1990s.[5]

Users

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Former users

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References

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  1. ^ "АНАЛИЗ МАТЕРИАЛОВ И ИХ СВОЙСТВ, ПРИМЕНЯЕМЫХ ДЛЯ СРЕДСТВ ИНДИВИДУАЛЬНОЙ БРОНЕЗАЩИТЫ". Успехи современного естествознания (9): 143–147. 2014.
  2. ^ "Первый массовый бронежилет для Советской армии". «Защита и безопасность» (3): 12–14. 2018.
  3. ^ "Самый массовый. Бронежилеты серии 6Б5 | Оружейный журнал «КАЛАШНИКОВ»" (in Russian). 2019-07-02. Retrieved 2023-11-08.
  4. ^ a b "Советский бронежилет 6Б2-3Т или 6Б3Т? Редкая броня ОКСВА". Youtube.
  5. ^ a b c d "6Б3 - Броня советских войск в Афганистане ЧАСТЬ 1 | ОБЗОР БРОНЕЖИЛЕТА". Youtube.
  6. ^ a b c d "АРМЕЙСКИЕ БРОНЕЖИЛЕТЫ, виды и характеристики бронежилетов". www.shovkunenko-book.ru. Retrieved 2023-11-09.
  7. ^ a b c d e f СРЕДСТВА ИНДИВИДУАЛЬНОЙ БРОНЕЗАЩИТЫ (РУКОВОДСТВО СЛУЖБЫ) (in Russian). Moscow: Братишка. 2004. pp. 16–18, 38–40. ISBN 5-902104-02-5.
  8. ^ a b "История и концепции создания армейских средств индивидуальной бронезащиты". Техника и вооружение (07). 2013.
  9. ^ "Отечественные средства индивидуальной бронезащиты военнослужащих: история создания | Русская DARPA" (in Russian). 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2023-11-09.
  10. ^ "Отечественные армейские бронежилеты". forma-odezhda.com. Retrieved 2023-11-09.
  11. ^ Publishing, Safar. "Ukrainian soldier in Iraq - what did they wear?". safar-publishing.com. Vlad Besedovskyy. Retrieved 19 October 2024.