Military develops new helmet capable of stopping stronger pistol rounds

Facebook
X
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email
The new helmet developed by Hyosung Corp. and Kyungchang Industry Corp. (PHOTO BY YONHAP)

LET’S READ SUARA SARAWAK/ NEW SARAWAK TRIBUNE E-PAPER FOR FREE AS ​​EARLY AS 2 AM EVERY DAY. CLICK LINK

SEOUL: South Korea has completed the development of an advanced helmet capable of protecting troops from stronger pistol rounds, a state defence research agency said Monday.

According to the Korea Research Institute for Defence Technology Planning and Advancement (KRIT), the new lightweight helmet is the result of a project launched in 2017 by two local firms, Hyosung Corp. and Kyungchang Industry Corp., to improve the survivability and mobility of troops in battle environments.

The helmet is capable of stopping shots from 9-mm pistols and other similar weapons, and its bulletproof capability remains intact even in hot or low temperatures, or submerged underwater, Yonhap news agency reported the institute said.

The military plans to start supplying the helmets to armed services in the latter half of this year.

“Developed under private-military cooperation, the new bulletproof helmets are assessed to have capabilities comparable to those made by advanced countries, including the United States,” KRIT said in a press release.

See also  Australia passes bill to axe Russian embassy lease near parliament

Materials used in the helmet can also be applied to non-military sectors, such as the production of firefighting gear, according to KRIT. − BERNAMA 

Related News

Most Viewed Last 2 Days

MixCollage-18-May-2025-06-23-PM-9770
Ex-Speaker pays heartfelt tribute to late Bidayuh leader
KCH-premier labour-1805-rs 07
Sarawakian designs AI chip, Premier lauds local talent
KCH-premier labour-1805-rs 17
Premier extends free tertiary education to workers
KCH-gerawat labour-1805-rs 06
Amended SLO a benchmark for other states’ employee welfare
ca3de28f0c1fa8ae2ad77736b10e49b668293839ee8eb
Bridging East and West: PM Anwar’s pragmatic push in Putin’s Russia