Who we are: Aholdtech is renowned for strong ballistic engineering, our chief bulletproof materials specialist comes from Israel. We are dedicated to constant evaluation of new high-performance materials and their application to ballistic science.
Our passion: In research and development has resulted in increased levels of protection while reducing product weight.
Certificated products: At present, all our products have passed the NIJ 0101.06 standard test, and our company has also passed ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management Standard.
@@sinasaman3224 no its not made of kevlar. What it is is it's sheets of UHMWPE(Ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene) stacked very thick, and pressed in between a custom platen press on a heated hydraulic press. Most likely inbetween 125-150 tons of psi, and 1300-1500 degrees farenheit on the top plate. Basically just sheets of plastic fabric that they press together and bond it super tight using heat, and pressure.
@usarmyfl1 Apparently, I'm told by someone with a lot of knowledge on this, backface deformation on helmets isn't as deadly as people say it is, and much of the time people survive with minor injuries using an ech, which is only level 3a
@@Shimitzu Doesn't look like it. The AHOLDTECH store there has categories for several types of IIIA helmets, but clicking them shows no products. And they don't even admit to having this level III one.
@@huntercook6605 ECHs are generally only being bought by the military, the NIJ-IIIA certification is for the crown point, the flattest part of a helmet. That is not being tested in this video. Theyre shooting the front and back's flattest axis point. These helmets are more than likely just NIJ-IIIA helmets but the angle of impact is showcasing their ability to deflect rifle threats.