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| | #redirect [[Flak Armour#Flak Armor]] |
| [[image:IG Flak Armor.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Arguably the most common type of flak armor in the 40k universe, based off the Cadian Shock Troopers standard gear. Noticeably lacking in the wiener department, and oddly doesn't protect the belly quite as well as the thorax (though what ''looks'' like clothing there is actually still armor)]]
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| '''Flak Armour''' is the most common form of [[Armor]] employed by the [[Imperium of Man]] and especially the [[Imperial Guard]]. Cheap and easy to make and manufacture by the average Imperial world, it is composed of multiple layers of ablative material, shock resistant material and ballistic textiles. Fairly similar to modern body armor in regards of rough construction, though the materials are more advanced. It is resistant to shrapnel and stab attacks done by human combatants armed with regular knife while offering pretty good protection against bullets from [[Stubber|combustion guns]] and glancing (or direct, lore varies) hits from directed energy weapons comparable in power to a [[Lasgun]]. Might sound unimpressive but keep in mind that it can stop anything short of an anti-vehicle weapon like anything with the word "heavy" or "missile" in its name. Bolters, too, which are basically dramatically larger versions of modern anti-tank rifles with rocket propelled explosive bullets.
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| == How Good Is It? ==
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| For example, modern Earth ballistic vests, constructed from Aramids like Kevlar, are either light weight vests that provide reasonable protection only against shrapnel and weaker rounds, such as .45 and 9mm, up to .357 and .44 Magnum or poor penetrating (will stop a shotgun slug but will result cracked and broken ribs at most, bruising like Mike Tyson punched you at the least), or heavy ballistic vests that equip heavier hard armour inserts that provide more coverage and withstand more powerful rounds, all the way up to armour piercing sniper rounds (at 7.62 mm / .30-06 caliber; assuming the wearer has some sort of metal or ceramic insert and can endure 3-12 shots from modern assault rifles before shattering depending on generation). Even then, modern body armor, composed of ceramic; titanium; and ballistic fiber at its finest, is useless against heavy machine gun to autocannon caliber ammunition (12.7 mm / .50 BMG and above).
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| With Flak armour gives a chance to not only survive a couple of impacts from from a light machine gun, or several from autoguns, but to remain in a shape to continue fighting (assuming it hits the chest piece), all while not weighing down the soldier significantly. When dealing with a local rebellion or facing pirates, bandits, [[Necromunda|hive-gangsters]] or the rag tag forces of the [[lost and the damned]], a suit of flak armour is an [[Emperor]]send and often means the difference between survival and a gruesome death. After all, it's said that any stubber at and below rifle caliber will ([[skub|supposedly]]) not pierce any part of the Flak Armour. So, in theory, Flak Armor makes you much harder to cut down, and fluffwise, it has also been said a laspistol will not defeat the chest armor. There are two thing to note: First A WH40k [[Autogun]] fires bigger rounds than a modern earth Battle Rifle or LMG. They fire 8.25mm bullets ("8mm Mauser" used 8.22mm bullets) (even though at a glance it obviously is so huge it's gotta be firing .50 cal), and this, again, is stopped by Flak. This means the average IG issued gear will take sniper shots with the user surviving. This is without taking into account the guns and armor in question are at ''least'' thirteen thousand years more advanced than what we have now, considering Imperial gear is pretty much all from the original diaspora from the Sol System around the same time period as the first use of the Rhino and Land Raider Proteus and intended for space hillbillies. It does beg the question of how big LMGs are in WH40k (real life LMGs use bullets only a bit larger than assault rifles or rather the same size as some nation's assault rifle bullets, so 40K LMGs probably use bullets similar in size to those of their normal rifles). The second is that of course lasguns are not ballistic weapon but energy weapons, so the requirement's to "deflect" a lasgun shot are different from that of a conventional weapon. That it can do both feats at once is no small accomplishment. (<s>Though it is noted to only stop ''glancing'' hits from a Lasgun - a laspistol is significantly lower power than your average Lasgun</s> lore has both glancing and direct hits, likely depending on pattern of both lasgun and armor, pistols in the lore have the same power as the full gun but shorter range, which is why they are mostly reserved for officers as that's very advanced tech) However, it may be that the angle that it is hit at simply gives enough protection to block a shot.
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| Note that autoguns are to stubbers what Mass Effect guns are to modern small arms (and can be anything from caseless ammo to rail or gauss automatic weapons to rifles using gravity manipulating technology) and stubbers other than handcannons and heavy stubbers are outright incapable of penetrating flak armor at any range and from any angle and this also extends to the flak shirt and flak pants worn by tunnel rat regiments and potentially what is worn under the armor of all Guardsmen. Flak armor and lasguns are almost uniquely used by the Imperial Guard whereas nearly all rebels and cultists they fight use either mesh armor, armor weave, scrap plate that might eat a stub pistol, or nothing and usually wield stubbers and maybe a few autoguns. Since about eighty percent of the Guard only ever fights rebels and cultists, this makes the average Guardsman practically a Space Marine to his normal enemies which is part of the reason why flak armor and lasgun are standard issue instead of carapace or powered armor. There simply is no point in spending the money to issue better weapons and armor when you're practically invulnerable and invincible to your normal enemies already. When there is something like a WAAAGH!!! or Black Crusade or whatever else, just throw more men at it and lots and lots of tanks and artillery. Since the average Guardsman is nearly invincible against the average rebel or cultist, there are many armored and artillery regiments available to throw at space horrors. It all works out pretty well unless you're one of the ground pounders who has to keep pressure on an anti-tank position while being shredded by anti-infantry you also have to keep busy while your own heavy support gets into position without being killed so they can save your ass so the tanks can come and kill everything. But hey, that's what conscripts and especially [[Penal legion]]s are for. Literally.
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| Also, keep in mind that most aliens the Imperium fights are less advanced than the Imperium. Usually, flak armor and lasgun is sufficient even without overwhelming numbers. Basically, ninety percent of the time the Imperial Guard is to the alien threat of the day what the Tau are to the Imperial Guard (but with more tank and less weeaboo) combined with overwhelming numbers. They really only face a challenge when fighting a true Chaos invasion, Tyranids, Necrons, Orks, and whatever flavor of Eldar (or a minor xenos faction advanced enough like the Fra'al or Tau, which is very rare). Ultimately, the average Guardsman is no joke. Whole squads of modern soldiers will be murdered to death by a lasgun toting IGman. There are literal quadrillions of them, and this is a low estimate. If only the cheap power armor STC were found. Oh wait, it was but the Ecclesiarchy kept it from the Mechanicus. '''Thanks guys!'''
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| A standard-issue Imperial Flak Vest is rated to stop a lasgun blast outside of close-range. And, assuming we are using relatively high-end calcs of lasguns firing at 19 "megathule" laser pulse, meaning a Flak Vest can stop a 19 megajoule laser dead in its tracks. Assuming "megathule" is a 40kism of "megajoule".
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| To put that in perspective, one of the most powerful AT guns in WWII was the German 12.8cm Pak 44, which was basically a naval artillery gun on wheels. This gun was powerful enough to kill buildings, let alone tanks, and it had so much penetration that it was basically impossible to carry enough armor to stop it. The 12.8cm Pak 44 had a muzzle energy of just under 13 megajoules.
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| Yes, the standard-issue Lasgun have the capability in firing a laser blast capable of carving holes in a modern MBT, and Guardsmen have standard-issue light body armor capable of stopping that same weapon. Of course, we need to take [[Skub|careful note]] that Lasguns have a literal dial-a-yield setting. It is more likely that the average lasgun have its damage output in line with the average autogun (essentially modern 21st century rifles but dramatically more powerful as they’re designs from humanity’s first diaspora nearly twenty thousand years from now, and the literal ballistic counterpart to the Lasgun with higher penetration but lower stopping power), with certain [[Heresy|unorthodox]] Guardsmen increasing their Lasgun firepower to that of Heavy Stubber capability (AKA .50cal but far more powerful because far future no duh) at the expanse of increasing wear and tear deterioration on the Lasgun's optics and pissing off the local [[Enginseer]]. After all, there is a reason why [[Lasgun#Long-Las|Long-Las snipers]] have to carry multiple spare barrels, <s>since their Long-Las is fixed permanently in the maximum power settings</s> because long-las fire the entire charge of a hotshot power pack in one blast.
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| With all that said and done, assuming every Lasgun has its fire settings switched to maximum, it is no wonder that the commonality of Lasguns makes it more odd to NOT see the usage of Flak armor in the hands of Imperial soldiers. And that equipment is considered sub-par in 40k. (This was partly paraphrased and partly quoted from user Rofl Tank in a YouTube comment about the Imperial Guard). Keep in mind that if a guardsmen was hit with a '13 megajoule' shot they would likely have every internal organ scrambled and sent flying back as the flak armor kept it from penetrating, but that energy had to still go somewhere. As is often the case when it comes to armor, the man is the point of failure.
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| Assuming, of course, that the energy capture of the armor is terrible, which would be very 40k. But if it performs like modern plates, it should take it with little complaint.
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| Flak armor comes in incredible variety. Some even have carapace armor sewn into them. There are also types of carapace armor that are technically a variant of flak due to being flak armor with sheathes plates of carapace in varying thickness and number can be inserted or removed. Art Almost always portrays flak armor with cracks and craters in it, making for very weird implications as to what common flak armor actually is. While tabletop has its crunch, lore flak armor is largely unpredictable. | |
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| == Why It Kinda Sucks ==
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| That said, when it comes to protecting its user from guns which shoot [[Bolter|.75, or (19.05mm) APHE rocket bullets]], [[Shuriken Catapult|hyper-sonic monomolecular ninja star assault rifles]], [[Plasma|bolts of compressed plasma]] as hot as a star's core designed to penetrate tank armor, [[Gauss|molecular disassembling beams]] which can break down virtually any material into their constituent atoms, and similar weapons which are the standard equipment of many factions of [[Warhammer 40000]]'s tabletop game, they are of little more use than a common [[Meme|T-shirt]]. Of course, if they miss, and shrapnel is thrown, the armor will probably save you, which is its purpose anyway.
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| Flak armour is also fairly cost efficient; it offers some protection in combat while costing less to produce, ship, and maintain than the soldier wearing it. This becomes less true as the armour becomes more complex. The quality of flak armor also varies wildly between manufacturers. Flak armor made on Mars, for example, would likely be space magic.
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| Also, most enemies are going to be suppressed by the large quantity and concentration of heavy weapons used by the Imperial Guard even without considering the platoon support weapons such as heavy stubbers and the squad special weapons. This enables Guardsmen (were they real) to get close to enemy positions and wipe their foes away with close-range lasgun fire. Since lasgun penetration radically increases the closer they get, this would logically be highly effective. So, most Guardsmen need to to be far more concerned with indirect fire than being hit by enemy infantry directly and flak armor protects very well from indirect weapons such as explosives and shrapnel. Remember, there are literally countless Guardsmen but only "millions die every day" in the Imperial Military as a whole. There is a reason for that.
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| In short, think of Guardsmen as suppressors for tanks against anti-tank threats and spotters for artillery (from man-portable mortars to the biggest of kablooie). Which means more than flak armor would usually be pointless. Soldiers specialized in directly attacking enemy positions wear radically superior armor and weapons; some of the best in the galaxy in fact, even in the Imperium. The average Guardsman, though, is purely supplemental to the vehicles and mostly needed for manning defensive positions in taken territory and telling big guns and missiles where to shoot while gunning down whoever is stupid/insane/scary dogmatic alien mindset enough to rush at them. Much like how modern infantry functions.
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| The next grade up is [[Carapace Armor]]. Which is actually a very large leap in quality. From a reasonable infantry armor sufficient against small arms to an infantry armor capable of tanking self-propelled small cannon shells. There is also an intermediate armor infrequently used called Combat Armor. This is light carapace plates covered in cameleoline and the light carapace is mounted atop flak armor. Said cameleoline makes it incredibly good at camouflage, so a particularly lucky veteran sniper may find themselves in one.
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| {{Template:40k-Imperial-Weapons}}
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| [[category:warhammer 40,000]]
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