3D printed gun parts plans


3D-printed guns are back, and this time they are unstoppable

Business

A decentralised network of gun-printing advocates is mobilising online, they're anonymously sharing blueprints, advice and building a community. There's no easy way they can be halted

A new network of 3D-printed gun advocates is growing in America – and this time things are different. Unlike previous attempts to popularise 3D-printed guns, this operation is entirely decentralised. There’s no headquarters, no trademarks, and no real leader. The people behind it reckon that this means they can’t be stopped by governments.

“If they [the government] were to come after me, they’d first have to find my identity,” says Ivan the Troll, a member of the group. “I’m one of many, many like-minded individuals who’re doing this sort of work.

Known only by his online moniker, Ivan the Troll is the de facto spokesman of an underground wave of 3D-printing gunsmiths. Ivan says he knows of at least 100 people who are actively developing 3D-printed gun technology, and he claims there are thousands taking part in the network. This loose-knit community spans across the whole world.

They communicate across several digital platforms, including Signal, Twitter, IRC, and Discord. They critique each other's work, exchange 3D gun CAD files, offer advice, talk theory, and collaborate on future blueprints. These 3D-printed gun enthusiasts – who share similar ideas and political viewpoints on gun control – mostly found each other online via gun control subreddits and forums.

Ivan is just one small part of this network. He says he is from Illinois, and is of “college age”, but otherwise he remains mostly anonymous, to lie low. At the same time though, he’s launched bombastic PR videos demonstrating the new 3D-printed gun parts he’s created in his garage, including a Glock 17 handgun frame.

One of his most recent videos shows the polymer Glock 17 frame in various stages of production in his workshop. The footage is set to fast-paced synthwave music and is run through a trendy VHS filter – the aesthetics are important. Toward the end, Ivan fires several rounds with the fully built handgun, as text flashes up saying “ANYONE CAN MAKE IT”, “LIVE FREE OR DIE”, and “GO AHEAD TRY TO STOP THIS YOU FILTHY STATISTS”. He’s also uploaded the complete CAD reference model designs for a 3D-printed AR-15 assault rifle to his file-sharing space online. It’s clear Ivan is trying to provoke his detractors as much as possible.

In February of this year, Ivan and his group decided to name themselves “Deterrence Dispensed”, which is a tongue-in-cheek nod to the notorious Defence Distributed – a 3D-printing gun company formerly run by Texan crypto-anarchist Cody Wilson.

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In September 2018, Wilson, 30, was arrested and charged with sexual assault against a minor. He is alleged to have paid $500 to have sex with a 16-year-old girl in his home city of Austin, Texas. Needless to say, this arrest effectively took Wilson out of the 3D-printed gun world entirely. Many of the people who looked up to him were either disgusted or realised that his time was up. He stepped down from Defence Distributed, which was before seen as the driving force behind 3D-printed guns since it launched in 2012. Wilson was released on a $150,000 bail, but has remained silent since.

Defence Distributed has many other ongoing legal battles. Attorney generals from more than 20 US states are currently in the process of suing the company – which has countersued – in a bid to reverse a court win that momentarily allowed Defence Distributed to upload and share 3D-printed gun blueprints online. Their headaches are long, drawn out, and ongoing. (New York State has just passed a law to ban 3D-printed guns).

For Ivan’s group, Deterrence Dispensed, none of this is relevant. They’re uploading these files individually on services such as Spee.ch, a media-hosting site underpinned by the LBRY blockchain, and they aren’t waiting for anyone to give them permission. They’ve made their own 3D-printed gun designs, modified old ones, and are keeping all the Defence Distributed ones available for free too.

“Even if there was no government telling me I couldn’t do this, I think that I would still do it,” Ivan says. “Some people get a kick out of video games, I like spending hours and hours drawing stuff on CAD.”

Ivan isn’t just “drawing stuff on CAD” though. He’s providing free files to help anyone with a half-decent FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) 3D printer and some hand tools to make a workable handgun. Once the CAD file is downloaded, it’s opened in a “slicer” program that translates the CAD files into instructions that the 3D printer can understand. Once the 3D-printed gun parts are ready, they can be assembled into a fully workable gun.

The CAD gun designs put out by Deterrence Dispensed are so well-made, according to Ivan, that they’re not just “workable”, but superior. “Our AR15 CAD model is the best in the public domain without a doubt,” says Ivan.

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Despite being overtly antagonistic Ivan has had no real run-ins with the authorities so far. His Twitter account was permanently suspended after New Jersey state senator Bob Menendez lobbied for it to be taken down, but as far as the government and law enforcement goes, things have been mostly quiet.

Ivan sees himself, and other radical 3D-printing gun groups such as FOSSCAD (another decentralised group of 3D-printing enthusiasts who focus on firearms), simply as hobbyists who’ve chosen the “wrong” thing to build. He sees 3D-printed guns as somewhat of a paper tiger. He points out that while 3D-printed gun parts can be built to kill people, zip guns (homemade firearms built from crude materials) have been around for decades and are arguably more deadly. The hysteria and backlash, to Ivan at least, is completely misplaced.

“Take it from me as someone who’s printed a gun. Making a slam-fire shotgun is 100 times easier, 100 times quicker, and about 100 times cheaper than printing a [regular] gun. For eight dollars I can pop down to Home Depot and build a shotgun.”

Already in 2019, 156 people have already been killed in US mass shootings, and gun-related deaths are at a 20-year high. In March, a terrorist armed with two semi-automatic rifles and two shotguns killed 51 people in an anti-muslim attack in Christchurch, New Zealand. In such circumstances, do the US (and the world) really need more guns – zip gun, 3D-printed, or otherwise? Ivan thinks yes.

“The cops killed more people alone last year than all active shooter incidents in the last ten years,” he says. “We live in a society, in America, where you run the risk of a cop blowing your ass up for no specific reason. You don’t even have to present a threat to them. A cop can kill you and get away with it just because he really wanted to do it.”

He then went on to cite the many police shootings of unarmed black men in American, specifically mentioning Stephon Clark. Clark, 22, was shot to death by police in his own back garden while holding nothing but a mobile phone. “I believe it is inherently important that … you should be able to own a gun,” Ivan continued. “You should be able to own the same legal force that the cops are using to control you.”

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But the facts are clear. The majority of gun deaths around the world come from just six countries – one of which is the US. And analysis from Harvard University shows where there are more guns, more murders happen.

Anti-gun campaigners, obviously, disagree with the notion of a downloadable gun. Avery Gardiner, the co-president of the Brady Campaign, has said 3D-printed guns present a "supreme threat to our safety and security". Speaking after a court decision in August Gardiner said: "Already, there have been a wave of dangerous actors seeking to illegally post the blueprints online".

A mix of a libertarian attitude and the rewarding hobby aspect of designing and creating something is often what drives members of these decentralised 3D-printed gun networks to do what they do – that is, uploading schematics, sharing them, improving designs, and making 3D-printed gun work more easily accessible while remaining largely under the radar. Ivan claims he does this for a love of freedom and “radical” belief in the US first and second amendment: free speech and the right to bear arms.

He takes this to such a radical degree though, that he even theorises he should technically be able to have his own Tomahawk Missiles, saying that they would be safer in his hands than in those of the US Military and its allies – given the country's track record for accidentally targeting civilians, including a wedding party in Afghanistan and a school bus in Yemen.

Referring to the mounting list of civilian killings carried about by US forces in foreign wars, Ivan sounds at times more like a radical leftist than the right wing “gun nut” many in America label him as. He claims not to have any specific ideology though, saying: “I get to be my own special snowflake.”

As of now, Ivan the Troll, Deterrence Dispensed, and the thousands many more 3D-printed gun enthusiasts connected to each other worldwide, have essentially let the cat out the bag. There is no way to stop the anonymous file sharing of 3D-printed guns online. Whether they’re just pretending to be doing this for reasons of liberty or otherwise, their message is clear: it’s already too late to stop.

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How to Make 3D Printed Gun Parts - Step by Step Guide

Table of Contents

Isn’t 3D printing an exciting technology, with so much power to bring almost any design to life. However, a lot of critics feel that such revolutionary inventions should be limited to those who could take proper responsibility for using it for the right cause.

One such 3D file that divided everyone into two perspectives was the 3d printed gun parts. Since the time the design first surfaced, it has always been in talks.

Some believe that such easy access to 3D design for creating a weapon that cannot be traced easily or could pass through metal detectors is completely dangerous.

After the first operational gun got its fame in 2013, a lot of other designers have come up with their own styles and designs. However, it’s still isn’t very acceptable.

Many countries have refined their laws against and in for of 3D printed guns. So far, after making the 3D gun parts designs legal to upload online in the USA, many activists and government organizations are fighting to put this down.

A lot is already happening and we do not know what the future entails. However, as of now, you can find pretty amazing 3d printed gun blueprints on the internet and online repositories.

Some of them are even free to download. So, let us know a bit more about the history of the 3D printed gun parts and how legit it is to print one at home.

A Peep into the History of 3D Printed Gun Parts

Cody Wilson designed the first 3D printed gun parts in 2013 and since then, the trend is only surging. Cody is the founder of the Texas open-source gunsmith organization Defense Distributed.

He is an experienced crypto-anarchist. The guy released the first 3D files for the one-shot pistol. Soon, the 3D file created a huge spark within the 3D printing community, bringing the most unprecedented controversy to date. And, it is still ongoing.

In only two days, the 3D file had 100,000 downloads. Right after which the US Department of State insisted Defense Distributed to turn down the model from the internet. This further turned into a legal battle that the techno-anarchist is still facing by the government forces.

Later, a variety of 3D printed guns were released, however, in the form of a pistol. On the other hand, Defense Distributed developed 3D printable parts that were designed for semi-automatic weapons. Hence, these were confiscated by the police.

With the increase in the surge of popularity of the 3D printed gun parts’ blueprints, available through the internet, these firearms have become available to anyone, irrespective of age, mental condition or any other criteria.

These could be accessed by police as well as criminals alike, without any code of legality. This certainly makes the problem much bigger than we can think of.

Hence, it was not very long that the government of different countries started imposing the laws to stop the circulation of 3D printed gun parts and even the 3D files for the same so openly, through the web.

Either its Australia or Japan or even the USA, the government of every country is trying their best to find a solution to curb the issues that are obvious with allowing sharing of 3D files for 3D printed gun parts yet not affecting the freedom of expression.

There are repositories that freely feature the 3D designs for these guns which could be downloaded for free.

But it won’t be easy to find these online forums so easily because of the surging legalities and laws concerning 3D printed gun accessories and parts. 3D printed gun blueprints do pose a hidden threat that we are yet to uncover.

3D Printer Making a Gun with Thermoplastic

The firearms were available before as well, but not completely designed out of thermoplastic material. These were usually assembled with few components made from a 3D printer.

However, Defense Distributed’s Liberator proved that the gun could be designed completely from a 3D printer. Apart from the metal firing pin along with the actual bullet, for sure, everything else was made of thermoplastic.

After the release of Liberator, Cody has been trying every bit to provide a push to his DIY firearms. It did not take much effort to make the 3D file viral though.

However, with the government’s decision to take off the file from the internet, it did provide his goals, a pullback. Following this, Defense Distributed came up with the Ghost Gunner. This is a desktop CNC milling machine that manufactures guns.

At the beginning of its release, the machine only produced the lower receiver component for an AR-15.

But as you would expect, Cody isn’t going to stop anywhere. He upgraded the software and now the Ghost Gunner is also capable of manufacturing the aluminum frame of an M1911 handgun.

Cody Wilson may feel that the increased accessibility of firearm production would help refine the gun rights, others have a different take on it.

The government and others from the 3D community are worried about the consequences of making the technology available to the wrong people.

Risks Associated with 3D Printable Guns

After the 3D designs for firearms got popularity, the governments from different countries started assessing the risks associated with the same.

The first thing to note is that these weapons created by 3D printers don’t need any identification code such as the serial numbers.

These serial numbers are helpful in tracking down those owning these weapons, helping law enforcement regulate the use of such dangerous weapons. However, these cannot be traced.

And, you do not need to go through any background check before you 3D print it. Hence, you can just go ahead and manufacture a gun using a 3D printer. Hence, the probability of getting these weapons in the hands of criminals rises even more.

The question is, are these loopholes are only after the 3D files trended on the internet? The answer is no.

These loopholes existed since the start and people are engaged in creating guns illegally as well. However, 3D printing did widen that loopholes, providing even easier access to everyone.

Is it Legal to 3D Print Gun Parts?

Soon after realizing the threat hidden behind the freedom of circulating 3d printed gun blueprints, the government from the different parts of the world started acting.

The UK Home Office restricted the creation of 3D printed gun parts in Great Britain. It even made buying and selling of these parts and 3D printed gun accessories illegal. The law passed in 2013 in the UK.

Later in 2015, the Australian parliament of the state of New South Wales also came up with a similar law putting serious prohibition against 3D printed guns.

Naming the law as Firearms and Weapons Prohibition Legislation Amendment Bill 2015, the government penalized physical as well as digital possession of 3D printable guns.

In 2016, California did make a different move though. It did not completely ban the manufacturing of 3D printed guns. However, the law required those doing so, to apply for a serial number from the state Department of Justice.

Singapore has stricter laws around Asia. The possession of 3D printed guns is punishable by death.

China wasn’t behind when it came to regulating rules regarding circulation and 3D printing of guns. In 2017, it urged by passing a law to register with the government who wish to manufacture 3D printed guns.

The law that has attracted the attention of everyone from around the world is the one passed in August 2018. The law allowed Defense Distributed to publish 3D designs for firearms.

The US Department of State decided and waived the restraint order put against Cody Wilson in 2015. Therefore, now, those who are willing to 3D print a gun in the USA can easily access the digital file online.

How to Create 3D Printed Gun Parts at Home?

There are two ways to go about it. The first one is to do it all by yourself. Or, you can take help from those who have already driven that path before.

After the restrictions were taken off that was put against Cody Wilson, the internet flooded with 3D printed guns blueprints. You can find a lot of designs to start with. It is easily downloadable and can be edited as required.

Here is what you can do to create a 3D printed gun:

Step 1: If you wish to do it on your own, you would require to create a 3D file for the same. You can use the 3D design software to make that happen.

You can use the one you are used to working with. Do not forget to ensure that the parts are properly designed to fit together.

If you at all think that you are not good enough with 3D designs, why not take help from others.

There are many designs available online. You can download the one you like and make edits to the same. You can even keep the design as it is.

Step 2: Decide to print it with a 3D printer that can provide you the accuracy and right results.

You may not want to 3D print it using a budget 3D printer. Instead, you must do some research and look for the option that could help you create accurate designs.

Step 3: Slice your 3D design. Ensure to use the tips that came along with the downloaded 3D design.

From layer height to all other precise details, you must ensure every setting is in place.

Step 4: Feed the 3D file to the 3D printer and start watching the work happen. It will take some time but the results would be remarkable if your 3D file is correctly designed.

Step 5: Assemble the parts, if any.

Step 6: If you think that the parts aren’t compatible with each other. You may edit the 3D file with a flaw and start printing again for the parts that did not come in their best shape.

Do not forget to check the legalities concerning your country. You may not be allowed to do it. If that is the case, you must make the decision accordingly. Or else, you may have to face consequences that won’t be in your favor.

The Conclusion

3D printing is a very progressive technology. And, as you would know, it could make many things possible that may seem difficult otherwise.

It could even help expedite the manufacturing process of those items that take longer to complete. All these benefits have always put 3D printing at the forefront.

The question is: Can we make sure that the technology is always used for the right cause. Or, can we make sure that the technology does not get into the hands of those who can bring the darker side of 3D printing to life?

All these questions have always bothered those who understand the limitless things that 3D Printing can accomplish.

There are always two sides to everything: the good and the bad. The greater the good, the worse the bad could be. For instance, 3D printed guns could do much worse than good.

If not you, a lot of people have that notion and for the right reasons. That is why it would be difficult to finalize a verdict against the production of 3D printed guns.

Or, even when it comes to legalizing the commercialization of such weapons, government and law enforcement bodies may have to act together to find a solution.

If we have to point in one direction, it could be towards providing better laws that could possibly ensure that the technology is not used for illegal and wrong causes.

But is that completely possible. However, whatever the future would be, and whatever the laws would surface later, as of now, not every country is that strict.

And, if yours is letting you do that, you can experience how it would be like to create 3D printed gun parts at home using your own printer.

🔫 Best 3D Printable Files for NERF Guns・Cults

🔫 Best 3D Printable Files for NERF Guns

Download 3D STL Files of Weapons and Accessories for NERF

These little NERF pistol toys are sure to remind you of your childhood. Thanks to 3D printing, it is now possible not only to 3D print NERF pistols, but also many accessories to make the game even more fun!

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Printed spinning targets

Free

Jumping Target for Toy Shooting

Free

Nerf Gun Elite Sniper Scope

Free

M1-MWS (Modular Weapon System)

Free

NERF Darts - Custom Tips

Free

NERF Barrel extension

Free

Steampunk Nerf Parts

Free

Nerf Dart Target

Free

LF1 - Foam Dart Blaster (NERF Compatible)

Free

MEGA ULTRA 2 CONVERSION KIT

Free

Nerf retaliator SMG kit

Free

Nerf Dart Launcher for the FPV-Rover

Free

Nerf support

Free

Nerf Sight

Free

Nerf Gun Wall Mount

Free

nerve scanner

Free

Nerf / Foam Dart: Alternative Tips of Doom

Free

External sight for NERF N-STRIKE Blaster (TACTICAL RAIL compatible)

Free

Nerf Dart - (Elite Dart) - fully functional

Free

Nerf MEGA Hammershot

Free

Nerf pistol with clip

1,80 €

Nerf Sledgefire Shell

Free

Flintlock nerf blaster (V.

1-3)

4,45 €

Compact Dart Launcher

Free

Nerf Tank

Free

Nerf Mega Dart Rail Accessory.

Free

CORNER-SHOT 3.0 Working Version

Free

Nerf technical(RC controlled)

Free

Adjustable Nerf laser sight

Free

Nerf Picatinny Grip

Free

Wheellock Musket Blaster

13.99 €

NERF barrel rail lighted

Free

Nerf Doublestrike Trigger mod

Free

Flashlight Mount for Nerf Tactical Rail

Free

RC FPV-Trike with rear steering wheel

Free

Nerf Logo

Free

Black Widow Bites

Free

Nerf Explosive Tips - Party Snap Foam Dart Tips

Free

NERF Stryfe grip handle cap

Free

Caliburn HPA - LPA short dart

Free

Hole Punch Gun

Free

storage flechette nerve

Free

Talon Claw sliding butt stock - Now Tool-less

Free

Spring Loaded Target for NERF Gun Fun!

Free

Nerf Worker AK Stock Cheekrest

Free

Nerf RK Flashlight Side Mount for MKII

Free

Nerf Jolt EX-1 Dart Holder (One or Two Darts!)

Free

Talon Claw U Super Core HPA Nerf

Free

Nerf recon cs6 Custom stock

Flintlock nerf blaster (V.

1-3)

Pirate Nerf Cannon V1-2 (Files Only)

MEGA ULTRA 2 CONVERSION KIT


Check out our selection of of the best 3D files for NERF weapons and accessories for 3D printers. All these STL files are easy and fast 3D printable, so all you have to do is download them, launch your 3D printer and choose your print color. This collection has been compiled by selecting the best creations from Cults 3D libraries .

Obviously, teaching children to play war is not a good thing, and we encourage all parents to explain to their children that it is not always a game. The NERF Guns looks more like colorful toys than real guns. Here at Cults we strongly oppose the use of 3D printing to produce firearms this collection exists because we consider the items listed here to be toys and not real 3D printed weapons !

Designers offering their 3D printed models for download on Cults competed with each other in creativity and ingenuity to bring you many, many weapons and accessories specially designed for NERF darts. There are spare parts for your toys, as well as small accessories or darts specially designed by 3D modelers.

So what are you waiting for to set up your NERF and start battles with your kids or office colleagues! Everyone will be jealous of your NERF 3D printed gun and your little accessories!

Stay away from 3D printers! or How the fight against 3D printed weapons is going

News

The United States has banned 3D printing of firearms. Again, you say? Not again, but again: first banned, then allowed, and immediately banned again because of fears about the growth of crime. We tell you what is happening, and why, despite all the anti-hype, 3D printers have nothing to do with it.

Let's start from the beginning: in 2013, American gun enthusiast and ardent defender of the second constitutional amendment, Cody Wilson, made the drawings of a homemade Liberator pistol publicly available, backing up the gift with a demonstration of firing from a sample printed on a Stratasys Dimension 3D printer. And it started: just at that time, 3D printers were on everyone's lips, and therefore certain segments of the public cried out about the inevitable end of the world. They say that now everyone will print pistols, and the whole world will drown in blood. Wired magazine even listed Cody as one of the fifteen "Most Dangerous People in the World." The publication of drawings and the manufacture of 3D printed weapons in the United States was immediately banned, and the posted 3D models were required to be deleted.

Five years have passed. So far, no change. Blueprints are still circulating on the web, there is no pandemic of 3D printed weapons, and the media continues to add fuel to the fire according to an already hackneyed manual, especially when there is another shootout at a school, church or somewhere else. The fact that 3D-printed firearms were not used in any of these cases does not bother anyone. Cody, meanwhile, also did not sit idly by: in 2015, he and his supporters sued the US State Department, and if earlier Cody demanded compliance with the second constitutional amendment guaranteeing the right to own weapons, this time he went on the attack with the first amendment guaranteeing freedom of speech. And so, on the tenth of July this year, Wilson won the lawsuit, and the Thingiverse site, well known to our readers, was immediately filled with 3D models of all kinds of firearm crafts.

Of course, the public reacted immediately and in different ways. One user named PeterNX left the following comment: “I am a Thingiverse member from Germany and fortunately these weapons are not allowed in my country. Please find a way to ensure that it is only available in countries where it is allowed. By the way, my view on this kind of thing is this: most 3D printers are used by creative people. This means that they like to create, not to destroy or kill. Creativity is our hobby, and we should fight for the right to create, not the right to create destructive things.”

The Democratic Party, meanwhile, decided to hype and, according to the good old habit, put all the responsibility on Trump:

“Wait at the local theater, wait at the local school, wait at the local stadium—any public place. This “ghost weapon” will turn into a new wave of violence in the United States,” Senator Richard Blumenthal minted, tapping his finger on the image of an AR-15 assault rifle.
“Donald Trump will be responsible for every 3D printed plastic AR-15 on the streets of our cities. Starting next midnight, bad people will be able to go to Instagram and get instagan, ”Senator Edward Markey echoed him.

We'll come back to the "ghost weapon" later, and "instaghan" is a play on words, something like "instant cannon". That is, instantly printed. Real printers here will grin and shake their heads, but that's not all: is it worth explaining that after such an enchanting pearl, T-shirts with the Instagan logo went on sale literally the next day?

However, they achieved their goal. Trump immediately denied the court's decision, out of habit informing the public through his beloved Twitter in his characteristic manner: “I deal with the sale of 3D-printed weapons to the public. Already talked to the NRA ( US National Rifle Association - approx. ed. ), this is some kind of nonsense! And just the day before yesterday, a federal court imposed a new ban on the distribution of digital models of weapons. From Thingiverse, the models were immediately removed.

But let us return for a moment to the poster in the hands of the senators. Politicians chose AR-15 not by chance, because these carbines are increasingly mentioned in criminal reports. There are only a few small nuances that senators prefer to keep silent about:

  • First of all, neither Wilson nor anyone else has ever made blueprints for the rifle publicly available, and if anyone did, it was only to print harmless cosplay replicas. Wilson published only a 3D model of the lower part of the receiver. Store models don't count, it's just to save money. The reason for this is simple: a serial number is stamped on the receiver. In fact, it is this detail that is recorded, and Cody and his associates advocate a literal interpretation of the second constitutional amendment, that is, unlimited, free possession of weapons without the intervention of any regulatory authorities. All other parts - from the butt to the barrel - and so you can safely buy in any American gun shop without any permits or checks.
  • Secondly, printing the same plastic barrel is not just nonsense, but also a guarantee of early disability retirement or even a nomination for a Darwin award, especially when it comes to an assault rifle with a fairly high-impulse cartridge. The "Liberator" is a "little thing" designed for a low-powered .22 LR cartridge, and this does not give any guarantee that the gun will not explode in the hand. You can only get out of it into the sky, and even then point-blank. Yes, it is theoretically possible to print a rifle from metal, but such a 3D printer will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. This is the most expensive category of additive hardware. The game is simply not worth the candle.
  • Thirdly, what's the point of risking your own health and printing AR-15 when anyone can buy it, whether on the white or black market? In addition, the Americans already have between five and ten million rifles of this type in their hands, not counting other models, but the crime wave, they say, will begin now that affordable 3D printers have appeared, on which only suicides or complete amateurs will print a rifle?

Actually, this public association of 3D printing with firearms is designed for amateurs. Emphasizing the availability of technology, opponents of the legalization of firearms seek prohibitive measures, but in reality this does not give any positive results. Only the reputation of the additive industry suffers, and suffers quite unfairly. What's even worse is that it can even come to state regulation of the additive industry, and we don't mean GOSTs anymore.


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