Blast-resistant boxers keep soldiers safe below waist
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By CHRIS LAMBIE Business Editor Wed, Jan 5
A British company has developed blast-resistant boxer shorts it wants to market to Canadian soldiers heading to Afghanistan.
BCB International Ltd. claims the protective Kevlar shorts, in development for about a year, will help reduce the number of Canadian troops who suffer groin injuries when mines go off underfoot or roadside bombs blast their military vehicles.
The boxers cost about 54 English pounds or C$84.
"We’re selling lots through the good old eBay retail sales," John Rix, the company’s manager of military sales, said Tuesday in a telephone interview.
The shorts have been on sale for about two months, he said. BCB spent about $75,000 developing the product.
The British army is evaluating them, Rix said.
The company developed the boxers after hearing from military medics, he said.
"When you step on an (improvised explosive device), it’s quite often that your front leg, you’re going to lose it," Rix said. "The blast goes up and hits you in the groin area, and it’s the . . . four inches below your groin area and the inner legs where your main arteries are that you need to protect."
He hasn’t tried wearing the shorts yet.
More on link
Article Link
By CHRIS LAMBIE Business Editor Wed, Jan 5
A British company has developed blast-resistant boxer shorts it wants to market to Canadian soldiers heading to Afghanistan.
BCB International Ltd. claims the protective Kevlar shorts, in development for about a year, will help reduce the number of Canadian troops who suffer groin injuries when mines go off underfoot or roadside bombs blast their military vehicles.
The boxers cost about 54 English pounds or C$84.
"We’re selling lots through the good old eBay retail sales," John Rix, the company’s manager of military sales, said Tuesday in a telephone interview.
The shorts have been on sale for about two months, he said. BCB spent about $75,000 developing the product.
The British army is evaluating them, Rix said.
The company developed the boxers after hearing from military medics, he said.
"When you step on an (improvised explosive device), it’s quite often that your front leg, you’re going to lose it," Rix said. "The blast goes up and hits you in the groin area, and it’s the . . . four inches below your groin area and the inner legs where your main arteries are that you need to protect."
He hasn’t tried wearing the shorts yet.
More on link