[member="Siobhan Kerrigan"],
"Well to begin with, the material itself has a pretty high melting point and energy absorption, a lightsaber will not cut through it, but because of the spaces between the rings, its heat will penetrate it. So, if you were struck while wearing his armor and nothing else underneath, you would get a very nasty and painful burn. While it is much better than being cut in half, it could potentially lead to some serious damage with repeated strikes."
The droid lifted up the suit again,
"It is even worse with blaster bolts and lightsaber stabs, more energy is able to seep through the gaps and cause more dangerous burns to damage the tissue. This could be potentially fixed by making a jazerant, just putting a layer of something to absorb the heat either behind or in front of layer of chainmail, but we do not really have any material accessible to fully take brunt of this without eventually being burned through, unless we are talking about things like armor-weave or Phrik, but right now we would only be able to make few suits like that."
He flipped the chainmail to look over its back, pretty much the same as front but we need to break the text up,
"When it comes to physical damage, any piercing or slashing trauma is pretty much ineffective, not fully though, it is just being transferred as blunt force, which the armor cannot really deal with because it is so flexible, it just goes right through it. So any warhammers, or those flails I make, bashing weaponry like that is pretty effective against the chainmail, just ignoring it. Again, this could be counter-acted with a layer of some absorption material behind the chainmail, but that would also need a layer of heat absorption over it, and it will never really take those flaws away, just buy more time against them."
He pulled on the chainmail sides again,
"We also had rings break with repeated physical trauma, for example more than just one shattergun shot in the same area, and once one break it can leave a pretty wide gap for weapons to go through, usually another ring breaking is not too far behind and the chainmail starts to unravel. Same goes for material of similar density like our Phrik spears, although the mail is pretty good at catching stabs, the Phrik tips were able to eventually break through it much faster than common melee weapons."
He would set it back down on the table,
"Not to mention that because of the gaps the armor is not vacuum-proof, gas will get through it easily, as will electrical attacks like Force lightning, just going right for the flesh, same for flamethrowers. It does not make a good main armor material on contemporary battlefield, but it works well as a supplement to be worn over actual armor."