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Maille and Plates Armour

Maille and Plates Armour
For my second instructable I'll be making some Maille and Plates armour.
I've chosen this style of armour due to the fact that it requires only a couple more tools than maille, goes together fairly fast, is easy to make, and i think it's pretty damn awesome looking.

For this project you will need....

Maille supplies
-THIS covers making maille better than i ever would in here.

Plate supplies
-fabric measuring tape
-tin snips
-a metal punch
-as much 1 1/4" pallet banding as you can get your hands on.
-something to curve plates with (rubber mallet, soup can, chunk of pipe... it just needs to be round)
-duct tape
-a sharpie

and that should about cover everything you need.
 
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Step 1Making the plates 1

making the plates 1
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  • banding1.JPG
  • banding2.JPG
  • template.JPG
  • cutting.JPG
  • 2plates.JPG
  • 5plates.JPG
  • 103plates.JPG
Step one is working out how big to make your plates.

I did that by using a fabric measuring tape to measure my chest at nipple height, make sure you're taking a deep breath for this measurement or it will end up too small.
got that number? great. now divide it by how many columns of plates you will have.
I'm doing 8 in total so i wound up with plates that are just over 4 inches long.

step two will be prepping your pallet banding.

the first thing you'll want to do is cut your banding into manageable size. I usually cut mine down to lengths around 3 or 4 feet. if you want to cut down on waste then cut them to the circumference of your chest plus 1//2 inch.
after you've done that you'll want to bend out any kinks as best you can. this batch of banding was around small bundles of pipe at work, and is in worse shape than i usually find.
Now that you have manageable lengths of banding it's time to clean them. Fortunately I clean metal for a living, so I have access to all sorts of fun machines to do this for me, odds are you'll have to do this by hand.
I'd recommend just hitting them with some emery cloth or sand paper and sanding them to a nice satin finish to remove the rust and paint on them. it's easier to sand a bunch of 3 foot lengths clean than to sand hundreds of 4 inch plates clean.

Ok, so you've got a bunch of shiny strips of metal now, right? Good.
now measure out the length of one plate, mark it, then take your tin snips and cut it as perfectly as you can. this will be your template. now just keep using this to measure and cut your plates until your ready to pull out your hair. i usually make my plates in batches of a hundred or so.
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102 comments
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Feb 4, 2012. 2:19 PMThe Metal One says:
you could make some extremely flexible plate armor this way....shoulders, breast, thighs, etc. a full suit even
Feb 8, 2012. 10:46 PMThe Metal One says:
YES!!!
Jan 23, 2012. 3:19 PMAdvar says:
Verily, good sir, thou dost have skill! :)
Aug 30, 2010. 3:57 AMskimmo says:
any one got anyideads on how to make this kind of washer armor?
Jan 23, 2012. 3:17 PMAdvar says:
For a scalemaille look one could overlap the washers from the bottom up.
May 24, 2011. 3:38 PMninja of suburbia says:
Go to http://theringlord.com. They sell these rings, or something similar, and it not only looks better, but more effective.
Sep 19, 2010. 5:05 PMGryndar says:
buy a bunch of washers and literally sew them to a vest, it wouldn't be very protective as far as thrusts went, and very ahistorical too. It looks kinda like armour, but is mostly hollywoody.
Sep 26, 2010. 2:45 AMskimmo says:
i think from a thrust you would have good odds of hitting in side a washer which would stop a thrust but chainmail wont stop a good thrust anyway
Sep 26, 2010. 6:53 AMGryndar says:
yes it will, theres been lots of tests on riveted maille, made with period materials, and maille is amazingly proof against swords, not so good against polearms though
Sep 28, 2010. 3:02 AMskimmo says:
riveted maille will stop a sword alot more then if it just open end mail such as this, with out welding or riveting you have to chance the edge will hit the gap in the ring then it just slides open and you have a gut full of knife
Jan 2, 2011. 7:09 PMPryo Chain says:
That's true, but even with riveted maille there's a chance that the blade could just break the rings apart, whether it be by thrust or through a strike. Everything is completely dependent on whether the competence of the wielder of said weapon.
Jan 9, 2011. 8:42 PMskimmo says:
well yeah is that:P
Jan 2, 2011. 8:28 PMGryndar says:
on most of the tests I've read involving maille made using period techniques and iron wire, not steel wire, the links would deform alot before they broke and then only the one link dirrectly affected by the point would break, thats only speaking of swords and arrows mind you, pole weapons are a completely different story
Aug 1, 2011. 3:31 PMAethereal says:
Is there a way you'd recommend to do this without the punch? As in, would drilling the holes work, or would it be better to just buy a punch?
Aug 17, 2011. 3:03 PMAethereal says:
Alright :) Thanks a lot!

Great 'ible, too:)
Jun 12, 2011. 2:49 PMscalhoun says:
I plan on making some gauntlets and the like, but i was wondering what type of steel you would recommend between cold rolled, hot rolled, or galvinized? I know stainless is probably the best way to go but it is much more expensive.
Oct 9, 2009. 5:24 AMpyrorower says:
I'm thinking of making this out of aluminum since I have a forge now. I'll try and post it when I can.
Also, about how heavy is your suit? I want to estimate how heavy my aluminum one will be.
Jan 2, 2011. 11:01 AMoverblast says:
You could use the forge to make aluminum plates from soda cans and transmission cases, which is what a friend of mine does for art projects. But you must be very very careful, it spits, he accidentally set the barn on fire.

DO NOT SET YOUR BARN ON FIRE. Your wife will be really really mad.
Oct 11, 2009. 2:55 PMpyrorower says:
I actually know that we don't need a forge for this, it's just that we could only find plastic palette banding and we happen to already have the forge and some old kick scooters :P And thanks for the weight estimates. I'll post pictures just as soon as we have it built.
Mar 6, 2009. 8:16 AMazurelupine says:
how about using "blue barrel" ie HDPE plastic as a plate material?
Mar 7, 2009. 10:09 PMazurelupine says:
Hmmm, 1/4" sounds about right.. would work with 1/2" rings using 14ga. mild-steel rings. As for extra protection, a good arming coat would also soften some of the blows (unless you rhino-hide, and I DETEST rhino-hiding! Please call a good shot a good shot. ;) ) Atlantia, Always! Vivats! Vivats! Vivats!
Mar 13, 2009. 7:32 AMazurelupine says:
BTW, Kingdom of Atlantia, Barony of Sacred Stone, Canton of Aire du Falcon. and serving in the household of my master, THL Osric the Pale (Hus Sla' Hamar) and the Lady Una von Shieb (Corvus)
Mar 16, 2009. 3:37 PMPKTraceur says:
Is that SCA?
Mar 18, 2009. 12:42 PMPKTraceur says:
I think Ill try to make your armour. Think you could help me on gate vaults?
Oct 9, 2009. 5:19 AMpyrorower says:
I can help you there. Armored invasion starting to sound good :D
Sep 26, 2009. 10:39 AMThe Jamalam says:
Any chance of a picture of you in the armour? I'd like to see how it fits together and things.
Aug 29, 2009. 9:39 PMswordsmen says:
what do you use to clean the metal
Jul 23, 2009. 3:54 PMAgnus Warstrider says:
A friend of mine has a torso/shoulder armored unit of pickle-barrel. Pretty thin stuff, but has been quite durable throughout its life of beatings. I want to get a full suit of the stuff, but I'm not sure where to get the barrels themselves. Any ideas? By-the-by, posting from the Kingdom of the West.
Jun 19, 2009. 10:05 AMSpeedmite says:
Good Job! A little confusing at some points though. I make chain maille differently.
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