I am posting this here so others may review my findings before I publish it in a wider venue. Any comments and or corrections would be very much appreciated.
Thank you,
Mikhail.
Question: How does ANSI Z87.1-2003 and Mil-PRF-31013 apply to Airsoft eye wear?What do these standards mean for our sport? Here I will test each standards specs to see if they aid in finding good safety gear for Airsoft.
Specifications:ANSI Z87.1-2003 high velocity -
150 fps of a 0.25 inch diameter steel ball (25 caliber) at point of impact
Mil-PRF-31013 Vo ballistic test
640-660 feet/second of a 0.15 inch diameter steel projectile (15 caliber)
Question: what is the Joule rating for ANSI Z87.1-2003 high velocity ?Find a .25" Diameter steel ball weight
http://www.precisionballs.com/ball_weight_and_density.htmlVolume of a Sphere is (4 * pi * R * R * R)/ 3
Density of steel is 0.283
Weight = Volume * Density
Weight = (4 * pi * R * R * R)/ 3 * Density
Weight = (4 * 3.1416 * 0.125 * 0.125 * 0.125)/ 3 * 0.283
Weight = 0.00231529375 pounds
Weight = 1.05019958 grams or roughly 1.0g
Energy rating of ANSI standard = 1.04 Joules
Now for MilspecFind weight of 0.15 inch diameter steel projectile
Weight = (4 * 3.1416 * 0.075 * 0.075 * 0.075)/ 3 * 0.283
= 0.00050010345 pounds
= 0.226843109 grams
Energy Rate of 460 FPS with a .226g projectile is 2.21 Joules
Discussion:Of the two the Milspec is closer to our sport as the projectile is the same as our average bb mass. Also the Velocity is closer to our normal FPS. It results in a 2.21 Joule rating that is OVER our usual Field guidelines. Higher would be better, but this is still better than nothing as far as existing standards go.
The ANSI Z87.1-2003 (high velocity) standard uses a slower velocity and larger projectile than we use...and a resulting lower Impact rating than what we need to protect our eyes. The 1.04 Joule rating is lower than many of our field limits and therfore unsafe to use as AS safety standard.
Conclusion:Using ANSI Z87.1-2003 (high velocity) standard as a safety standard for airsoft would be allowing eyewear insufficent to protect against the average AS rifle.
Mil-PRF-31013 (Vo ballistic test) is a SLIGHTLY BETTER standard as it fits our projectile physics BUT is lower than most accepted safety standard, which is usually a mulitple of the average usage...not just slightly ABOVE average usage.