Alright. I've been theorizing about armor. Body armor, and heavier.
Anyways, I've been looking into kevlar armor, doing some research on it. Actually, I'm lying, I just watched a Discovery channel special on body armor.
Well, it seems that the body armor, made of kevlar, currently on the streets with todays cops, and the body armor with a steel back plate, currently found in military service, have two enormous drawbacks. One, is that they cannot completely stop a round. As such a high-velocity, high dencity round can go through it like a knife through warm butter.
The second is that they cannot protect the wearer from multiple hits in at the same point.
My theoretical body armor would be made of titanium, or another such material, woven into a thin, flexible strand. This strand, supposadly, can be moved and bended, like thread, but has the proportional strength of the alloy it is made out of.
Now, notice I said
proportional. If you fired a bullet at a steel block that is 1 foot thick, you would get nary a dent. If you fired a smaller bullet, one about 30X smaller, at a 30X thinner piece of strand, you would also, get almost no dent.
My theory is that if you interwove these strands together, they would produce a similar effect, one strong enough to deflect bullets larger than today's current kevlar armor. A demonstration of how this is possible is shown below.
Figure 1:

A bullet of X mass, traveling at Y speed, impacts the weaved armor. The armor, at X mass (the same mass or greater as the bullet) and traveling at 0(y), does not move. At least, not totally.
As shown in Figure 2, below:

, the bullet impacts the armor, but due to the elacticity offered by the threaded material, the armor bends inwards [it should be noted that this is dramatisized to show this], with the bullet, cushioning it, and then, as shown in Figure 3, the bullet rebounds [it may be necessary to interweave multiple strands of elastic threading to produce this effect. In fact, it is probably required].

Now we come to the multiple hits portion of the theory. Since the body armor is [supposed to be] suspended
away from the body, this allows multiple bullets to hit the area, and, depending on the armor's distance from the body, be rebounded back. The farther away the armor, the better, because the farthe it can bend inwards.