A Working Assault Rifle Made With a 3-D Printer

IEATV8S

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 3, 2007
printedgun.jpg

3-D Printed Gun HaveBlue


Get ready. It's now possible to print weapons at home.

An amateur gunsmith, operating under the handle of "HaveBlue" (incidentally, "Have Blue" is the codename that was used for the prototype stealth fighter that became the Lockheed F-117), announced recently in online forums that he had successfully printed a serviceable .22 caliber pistol.

Despite predictions of disaster, the pistol worked. It successfully fired 200 rounds in testing.

HaveBlue then decided to push the limits of what was possible and use his printer to make an AR-15 rifle. To do this, he downloaded plans for an AR-15 in the Solidworks file format from a site called CNCGunsmith.com. After some small modifications to the design, he fed about $30 of ABS plastic feedstock into his late-model Stratasys printer. The result was a functional AR-15 rifle. Early testing shows that it works, although it still has some minor feed and extraction problems to be worked out.

HaveBlue has also been testing the "marketplace" for 3-D printing weapons. To do this he asked Thingiverse, the 3-D design sharing site run by Makerbot Industries, whether it was permissible to post weapons designs or not. According to HaveBlue, Makerbot's senior leadership decided to not disallow, but to discourage, the posting of weapons designs. Haveblue then posted a design for an AR-15 part on Thingiverse, but in the intensive legal discussion that followed Haveblue's posting, Thingiverse decided to ban weapons designs outright. However, since Haveblue's design is still on the site, it's unclear whether Thingiverse is enforcing a ban or not.

While there are still some details to sort out, it's pretty clear that making weapons at home using 3-D printers from commonly available materials is going to become much more commonplace in the near future. In fact, as 3-D printing technology matures, materials feedstock improves, and designs for weapons proliferate, we might soon see the day when nearly everyone will be able to print the weapons of their choice in the numbers they desire, all within the privacy of their own homes.

http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2012-07/working-assault-rifle-made-3-d-printer
 
I read this story earlier today and it's interesting but you could just do everything by CNC.

3D printing is CNC.. only instead of using tools to remove material in a destructive process that leaves a lot of waste, you are using a constructive process that has no waste.

i'm sure they will figure out a way to regulate this stuff and make it all but illegal to make you own weapons at home.
 
3D printing is CNC.. only instead of using tools to remove material in a destructive process that leaves a lot of waste, you are using a constructive process that has no waste.

i'm sure they will figure out a way to regulate this stuff and make it all but illegal to make you own weapons at home.

From what I've read the only piece that's relevant with 3D is the lower receiver, everything else needs to be machined steel (upper and barrel anyway).

If 3D printing could do steel instead of enamels (or whatever it is) this would be a more interesting story.

Correct me if I'm wrong, please.
 
From what I've read the only piece that's relevant with 3D is the lower receiver, everything else needs to be machined steel (upper and barrel anyway).

If 3D printing could do steel instead of enamels (or whatever it is) this would be a more interesting story.

Correct me if I'm wrong, please.

they are working on being able to do 3D printing with steel and other metals.. it can currently be done with large machines that cost a lot of money to buy and operate, but go back 10 years and 3D printing with plastics was the same way... give it 100 years, and we'll have Star Trek replicators in every house...
 
That is not an assault rifle. Look up the definition.

"Assault weapons"

The term assault weapon is a United States political and legal term used to describe a variety of semi-automatic firearms that have certain features generally associated with military assault rifles. The 1994 Federal Assault Weapons Ban, which expired on September 13, 2004, codified the definition of an assault weapon. It defined the rifle type of assault weapon as a semiautomatic firearm with the ability to accept a detachable magazine containing more than 10 rounds, and two or more of the following:
Nice carbine though.
MIkey
 
I wonder if this guy has the proper paper work to build weapons that have no serial number? If not I'm sure the BATFE will be calling soon.
 
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