Body Armor Question for LEOs

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For those of you who wear body armor everyday (excluding outer plate carriers), what kind of shirt do you wear between your skin and plate carrier? I mean do you wear a regular undershirt or a moisture wicking shirt? Thank you for everyone's input.
 
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Are the moisture and sweat from your body able to dry with your vest smacked right on top of your under armour? That is my buddy's complaint.

The problem is not with the under armor shirt. It's the moisture trapped between the vest and under armor (or whatever else one wears) shirt. The under armor shirt will dry quicker than a cotton shirt, a lot quicker as a matter of fact. But nothing really dries quickly under a ballistic vest.
 
Regular V-neck white T-shirt. If it's cool enough out and I don't think I'll be smelling too bad without a shower, I might wear a colored T-shirt or a funny T-shirt so I can just take my uniform shirt off and go to the bar after work. Never, ever a cop T-shirt. That's kinda gay.
 
When I was wearing body armor regularly, there was no Under Armour and other such fabrics. Tried talcum powder, corn starch, all that did was cake up and make it more miserable. Spray or roll-on antiperspirant on your chest and back was slightly better but not 100% either. Like CQB27 stated, it never really dries.

My biggest issue was keeping the ballistic panels clean and odor free. We were issued two carriers and could easily launder them, but the panels soaked up sweat and can gag a buzzard after a single shift. It wasn't recommended but Lysol spray or a weak bleach solution was the only thing that could cut the funk until febreze came along. The use of any these products on the panels are not endorsed by most manufacturers though.
 
Thanks for everybody's input! I don't really want to divulge too much information, but I'm going to be wearing soft body armor for my employment soon. I'm looking for the best way to stay cool and dry, especially during the summer months.

During most of the year, I'll be wearing some kind of t-shirt, then soft body armor over the shirt, on top of that would be a polo shirt, and then probably one of those 5.11 tactical photographer looking vests. Yes, I know I am going to look like a "tacticool tool", but that's the most effective way for me to conduct my employment.

During the cooler months (Fall and early spring), I'd be wearing a long sleeve polo over the soft body armor. During the cold months (winter), I'll be wearing a jacket instead of the 5.11 tactical photographer vest.
 
I bought my first body armor (Second Chance Y Model) in 1981, while in the academy. A few years later, the NIJ made waterproof coverings on the ballistic panels mandatory and the vests got much hotter when the panels no longer could breath or ventilate. That was a croc, as body armor only lost about 5% of it's resistance ability when totally soaked and not many of us got into shootouts while climbing out of swimming pools. When your vest fits correctly and covers you properly, it's like wrapping your torso in plastic trash bags.

I never found any undergarment to be cooler than any other. It's just something you have to learn to live with. Try different undergarment options; if you think one helps, use it. Perception is reality!
 
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I tried everything including the old Safariland "astronauts" t shirt. I finally settled on a heavy cotton t shirt. The last few years I worked I used an external vest panel carrier. Most of the folks in our state went to the external carrier. During hot weather it is much easier to slip out of the external vest carrier when in a secure area to cool off.

Short of working in a Northern climate during winter, the vest is hot and sweaty no matter what you do.

Good luck on your deployment.
 
Thanks for everybody's input! I don't really want to divulge too much information, but I'm going to be wearing soft body armor for my employment soon. I'm looking for the best way to stay cool and dry, especially during the summer months.

During most of the year, I'll be wearing some kind of t-shirt, then soft body armor over the shirt, on top of that would be a polo shirt, and then probably one of those 5.11 tactical photographer looking vests. Yes, I know I am going to look like a "tacticool tool", but that's the most effective way for me to conduct my employment.

During the cooler months (Fall and early spring), I'd be wearing a long sleeve polo over the soft body armor. During the cold months (winter), I'll be wearing a jacket instead of the 5.11 tactical photographer vest.

A few thoughts:

1. Undergarment:

I don't wear concealable body armor much any more, but I used to wear a regular cotton T-shirt underneath. I bought V-necks as they would work just as well with an open neck shirt as they fit with a dress shirt and tie.

As noted above, wicking undergarments like UnderArmor, or back in the day, a poly-pro base layer do a great job of wicking sweat away from you, but you'll still get damp in the areas where the moisture is trapped by the body armor and has no where to go.

My body armor's carriers are black so I wear a black t-shirt under it. If your t-shirt and body armor carrier are light/dark opposites, the carrier can be more discernible under a light colored shirt in some lighting conditions.

2. Concealing soft body armor effectively involves some compromises.

If you want actual concealable armor that a casual observer won't notice, then you need to accept reduced coverage around the shoulders.

The material also makes a difference. My last (and current) soft body armor is made from Spectra (one of the trade names for ultra high molecular weight polyethylene) and it offers a couple advantages:
- the Class IIIA Spectra armor is about the same thickness as Class II Kevlar, so it's more concealable at a given level of protection, and
- the fibers are sealed/encapsulated so that it isn't adversely affected by moisture.

3. A Polo shirt is a very poor choice for an outer garment.

The stretch nature of the fabric and the generally plain front on a polo shirt conspire to show any edges or surface irregularities under the shirt.

A short or long sleeve cotton or poly cotton shirt with buttons down the front and front pockets is a much better choice as it tends to break up any outlines underneath it.

In hot weather one of the vented Columbia shirts work well as the loose cut of the shirt, the slight wrinkles in the poly cotton fabric, combined with the front pockets do an excellent job of obscuring any outline from the body armor underneath.

If you wear one of those, you won't need to wear a tacticool vest or an unseasonably warm cover garment that just screams "guy with body armor or a gun". And regardless of what you'll be doing, looking obvious probably isn't the best way to do it.
 
Get two panel carriers so you can switch them a out and wash them once a week or so. If not they will get funky, stink and you can even develop a fungus on your skin like athletes foot on your chest. Wearing a vest is never comfortable no matter what kind of shirt is under it but please wear it anyhow. You sweat in the summer, you sweat in the winter. Winter is sometimes the worst because you sweat then go out into the cold and shiver because your all wet under your vest but its freezing outside. I'm just glad them years are over for me!
 
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