Again?
Again?
Edit: Oh, a different one. Ugly as sin.
Did they fix the receiver problem with their semi-auto design?
Use the source next time
http://www.forbes.com/sites/andygre...-worlds-first-entirely-3d-printed-gun-photos/
Why bother when you can get the real thing for so much cheaper and less tracking...
FYI its a single fire gun so dont get to carried away. You get 1 shot and throw the fker in the trash can (or recycle it).
FYI its a single fire gun so dont get to carried away. You get 1 shot and throw the fker in the trash can (or recycle it).
In half a century when people can "print out" a fully functional gun or any number of dangerous objects on the cheap in their very own homes in hardly any time at all I fully expect the government to attempt to regulate the technology.
The government is going to attempt to regulate the technology LONG before that.
50-100 years from now when this technology rapidly advances and the costs nose dive to a point where it's cheaper to mass produce products by printer than it is by human hands or even automated assembly line I anticipate some serious repercussions for jobs and society in general. In half a century when people can "print out" a fully functional gun or any number of dangerous objects on the cheap in their very own homes in hardly any time at all I fully expect the government to attempt to regulate the technology.
I'd say mostly to the gov't... the people need freedom man.Freedom is dangerous. Dangerous to whom is the question.
ABS is $25 a kg
Printer's at least a G. And most people are clueless when it comes to computers, let alone a CAD system, which would run for a few Gs unless you download illegally. Guberment might try to track people downloading 3D gun plans.
May as well just walk into the hood or a gun show and buy something with no paper trail. It'll actually fire more than a few shots too...