If you were building a new house, and planned to use composite metal decking over steel floor joists, what would you use for a concrete type of filler? The decking would be 14 or 16 gauge galvanized steel, with the profile probably 1.5".
Regular concrete would have to be about 8" thick, I believe, to be bullet resistant. There is Ballisticrete, but it is usually applied on a vertical surface and probably would be very difficult to pour and level.
I suspect some high strength additives applied to 4,000 psi concrete might work. Hoping to keep the weight of the floor moderate for various reasons.
For bullet resistance, would like to stop .223, pistol rounds, and 7.62x39. However the rounds would not be concentrated into a small area.This message has been edited. Last edited by: c1steve,
-c1steve
Posts: 4220 | Location: West coast | Registered: March 31, 2012
lots of testing including ul listing on this issue. nominally you need 4" according to the quick research I did for the calibers mentioned. But I am unclear what you are trying to accomplish as normally decking has no meaning in this discussion.
“So in war, the way is to avoid what is strong, and strike at what is weak.”
are you trying to stop 1 errant bullet (e.g. UL 752 Level 5 is 1 round of of 150 grain 7.62x39) or somebody concentrating repeated rounds in one small area (e.g. UL 752 Level 7 is 5 rounds of M193 and Level 8 is 5 rounds of 150 grain 7.62x39)
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Posts: 24399 | Location: Northern Suburbs of Houston | Registered: November 14, 2005
No, it is a very nice area. I think long term, and "what if". So what if there was a home invasion, and you wanted to protect the second floor bedrooms from bullets? If it was your new house being constructed, and your kids were upstairs, how would you build this?
Second floor would be about 1,200 sq. ft. More like trying to stop wild shooting of AK or AR-15 rounds, so not repeated rounds into a small area.
-c1steve
Posts: 4220 | Location: West coast | Registered: March 31, 2012
Originally posted by c1steve: No, it is a very nice area. I think long term, and "what if". So what if there was a home invasion, and you wanted to protect the second floor bedrooms from bullets? If it was your new house being constructed, and your kids were upstairs, how would you build this?
Second floor would be about 1,200 sq. ft. More like trying to stop wild shooting of AK or AR-15 rounds, so not repeated rounds into a small area.
You could dump a lot of money into support structure and bullet resistant materials to hold up 1200 sq ft of concrete or 1200 sq ft of Level 5 composite panels but have very little to show for it in risk reduction.
IMO, basement panic room with bullet resistant hidden ladder / spiral staircase from 2nd floor has a lot more cost benefit ratio.
Here is an example of money wasted on half measure bullet resistance. 30 years ago, oil companies actually owned gas stations and therefore had standards for bullet resistance for the cashier's booth/cage. One iteration fouled up badly by only putting in bullet resistant glass (ie only portion of booth/cage protected). The turds figured out below the counter wasn't bullet resistant so they could make the cashier dance and give up the register's contents.
Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity
DISCLAIMER: These are the author's own personal views and do not represent the views of the author's employer.
Posts: 24399 | Location: Northern Suburbs of Houston | Registered: November 14, 2005
The walls will be ICF with 8" concrete core. floor joists will be steel, held up by Watkins steel hangers. This will hold a lot.
Something that would help, from researching the matter, is to use a rubber like substance under the concrete. Rhino Liner has been suggested. This should have to be under the steel pan to keep the concrete somewhat bonded to the steel.
-c1steve
Posts: 4220 | Location: West coast | Registered: March 31, 2012
I've built a lot of safe rooms out of concrete without adding anything special, using bedliner, or any other exotic materials.
But you are correct that thickness matters. I'm assuming you don't need the entire floor of the entire house to share those properties. Why not cap off your specific room to the required specifications, and have your regular house floor above/next to that?
Just curious, are you worried about people shooting down at the roof or just the occasional falling bullet? My understanding is there’s a big difference between the two.
We’re just finishing up an ICF house. The wall’s are 6.5” poured concrete with 2.5" of foam on each side and rated for 280mph. An extra 1.5” of concrete will be a really thick finished wall. Again just curious, why so thick?
Posts: 12716 | Location: SWFL | Registered: October 10, 2007
The bedrooms will be on the second floor. I am concerned about a potential home invasion, with errant firing into the ceiling from the first floor. I would like to protect the entire second floor.
If people ran and hid in a bathroom, that should be protected as well as bedrooms. Not worried about high winds or hurricanes.
I am in earthquake country, and am fairly sure that 8" ICF cores are needed for the walls of a house with two floors in my area.This message has been edited. Last edited by: c1steve,
-c1steve
Posts: 4220 | Location: West coast | Registered: March 31, 2012
Someone sent me a link to improving cement for bullet resistance. Multiple tests were done with steel fibers. They only test using 1/4" and 1/2" long fibers, but were able to obtain bullet resistance in as thin as 2". Testing was done with 7.62x51 ammo, so .308. Concrete was UHPC.
url=https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/11/2/63]https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/11/2/63[/url]This message has been edited. Last edited by: c1steve,
-c1steve
Posts: 4220 | Location: West coast | Registered: March 31, 2012
Force protection design hardens the exterior envelope and the perimeter. If you don’t have ballistic rated glass and exterior walls designed to withstand projectiles what’s the point of doing the floor.
And if you are harden from the outside lock you doors and load magazines.
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Posts: 4824 | Location: Home | Registered: April 27, 2009
As others have suggested, maybe sort out a more limited area than the entire floor? That is going to be very expensive I'd think, and still have vulnerabilities as some have pointed out. Unless you're worried about ninja-master-thief-murders disabling any perimeter warnings and silently slinking in and THEN shooting upwards to announce their arrival.
Are you putting a safe door on each stairway?
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Posts: 13017 | Location: Madison, MS | Registered: December 10, 2007
^^^^^^^ As a retired custom cabinet maker was involved with remolding and building some new judges bench panels that were used in several court rooms using Kevlar panels............. drill sgt.
Posts: 2266 | Location: denham springs , la | Registered: October 19, 2019