FAQs

Below you will find answers to the most common questions about our products. If you have a question that was not answered on this page, please feel free to send us a message.

Bullet-Resistant Glass (BRG) can be ideal in certain situations.  It is transparent, allowing the window to remain in use, and since it is a permanent installation, it is always ready to protect.  However, it can have some severe drawbacks:

1. Depending on the protection level needed, BRG can cost between $25 and $100 per square foot just for the material; however, it is not a drop-in replacement for a conventional window design.  To convert unbuilt construction or develop a retrofit for it in older construction can easily make the cost reach $400 -$600 per square foot once you consider:

  • Local approvals and permits
  • Engineering approval
  • Architectural review
  • Current window removal
  • Wall/window frame reinforcement
  • Site installation
  • Interior sheet rock and trim repair, exterior siding repair

2. It is heavy, weighing between 14 and 26 pounds per square foot.  This can make it challenging to add as a retrofit as this weight may exceed the structural ratings of the building walls.  It is also difficult to transport, handle, and install.  This is especially true in multi-story buildings.

3. A converted BRG window can no longer be used as an egress without very complex design.

4. It is impractical to install as a door, as it would make the door extremely heavy, making it cumbersome to open and close and it would prohibit the use of conventional hinges to support the weight (adding more cost).  Glass in a door is really only practical when limited to small portal windows.

Using a Blastac® fabric shade can resolve some of these issues:

  • When considering shipping and installation costs, fabric shades can be often be a lower total cost that BRG (the exact price will vary based on the details of the installation).
  • It weighs approximately one pound per square foot, making it much easier to install.
  • It requires no modifications to the existing window, which then can continue to open and close as normal and act as an egress.
  • It is only deployed as needed.
  • It is removable which is important if the property is a lease or rental.
  • When used to protect a door, there are no modifications to the door itself, allowing the door to be standard residential or commercial construction for size and weight.

A proprietary fabric design, the core of which is a custom weave of Kevlar® para-aramid fiber, the same type of fiber used in the anti-ballistic body armor used by the military and law enforcement. Unlike body armor, our design does not rely on the strength of the Kevlar fibers alone to stop the projectile. The patented mounting design acts as an energy-dissipating system, which enhances the shade’s ability to absorb the impact of the bullets while transmitting less stress to the construction around the window or door.

  • Without the patented “energy-dissipation” solution, the mounting would have to be significantly stronger to withstand the impact of the bullets without being torn off the wall.
  • A simple curtain made of Kevlar would have an issue defending your home if successive rounds were fired at it.  In our testing of Kevlar alone, it was found that the first round will hit with sufficient force that the curtain will be pushed into the air (like a cape in the wind), which will allow successive rounds to pass through unencumbered.
  • Exposed Kevlar degrades in the presence of UV light.  Without an opaque covering, the Kevlar would eventually have its strength significantly reduced.
  • The thickness required for the Kevlar to stop handgun fire would make the Kevlar curtain very stiff and cumbersome to move out of the way of the door or window.

Great care was taken during the development of the product to make the installation easy enough for a novice to handle it.  The product installs with no more effort than what installing common residential window shades would take.

  • The average installation time is less than thirty minutes.
  • Requires no specialty tool.

However, if the area around the window/door has any kind of complex trim or casing, this could complicate the installation.  If this is the situation, please include pictures of the area with your quote request so that we can examine the surrounding structure.  We may determine a highly customized installation package is required or even recommend you to one of our installation partners.

If there are adjoining window frames separated by a mullion or section of the wall that is not likely to have solid enough construction to stop a projectile on its own (see image below), two options exist to allow for the protection of these areas:

  • Option A: a single-shade construction that is wide enough to cover both windows and the mullion in between.  This option may have other design limitations, such as requiring a motorized roller if the weight of the fabric exceeds the limits of the manual roller design.
  • Option B:  At an additional cost, we can provide ballistic fiberglass plating to cover the mullion spacing.  This would mount permanently to the wall.
  • The smallest size is for a 16” wide window.
  • The maximum dimensions that can be accommodated for a single shade are 103” x 106”.  For needs that exceed this size, there are options for piecing together multiple sections or extending the height, please contact us directly if this is your need.
As there are a lot of options that can affect the cost (manual, motorized, protection level, mounting options…), it is nearly impossible to put a generalized number to it; however, the fabric product is similar in cost to body armor as the ballistic core is very similar. Our product also includes oversizing the coverage area by several inches in each direction to protect against rounds that are fired at the window or door at an angle.

It is critical that the fabric is either stored rolled up on the rod it came with, with no bunching, wrinkles, and misshaping to the roll, or stored completely flat. Wrinkles and creases can reduce the strength of the Kevlar. If you do happen to store it incorrectly and it develops a permanent crease, DO NOT iron the fabric. Let the fabric rest completely flat using weights to flatten the wrinkles with gentle pressure.

Yes, but international shipments may use alternate material sources.

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