Selecting the metal for the officer on the street
Aesthetics do not determine the functionality of public safety equipment. The visual appeal of a metal finish fails to predict its performance on a rainy Tuesday night. A shiny surface reflects the fluorescent lights of a boardroom with perfect clarity. This same surface reveals every scratch once it meets the reality of a patrol car door.
Seven people sit around a mahogany table in a room without windows. These individuals review samples of gold plating and silver nickel. They touch the smooth edges of the metal with clean hands. None of these people will wear the metal on a heavy polyester shirt for .
Professional committees choose equipment based on the environment they inhabit. They value the way a badge looks when it is held up to a window. This choice ignores the chemical interaction between human sweat and thin plating.
The Sterile Vacuum Fallacy
I once believed that a higher price guaranteed a better protective coating. I spent four hundred dollars on a set of localized digital icons that looked perfect on my calibrated monitor. The colors shifted and the edges blurred as soon as the user changed their screen brightness. I trusted the specification sheet more than the actual viewing environment.