3D-Printed Semi-Automatic Gun Is Simply Terrifying....
Even if his plans did leak he doesn’t think untraceable semiautomatic weapons will be flooding the streets and flowing into the hands of criminals. “If you keep shooting, it’s going to fail,” he hold Wired. “That makes it not such a desired weapon for a criminal.”
So all you have to do is dodge bullets until the gun fails. Phew.
http://gizmodo.com/3d-printed-semi-automatic-gun-is-simply-terrifying-1756820431 This is not terrifying.
It is only an early stage in the adaptation of weapon technology to 3d printing.
3d printing requires re examination of basic concepts such as "what is a cartridge?" "what is a barrel?" "What is a firing mechanism?"
Bullets, for example, may be made with short integral barrels. All barrels may be one use throwaway. Etc.
The duplication of an existing firearm on a 3d printer is a waste of time.
Well said. Very true wouldn't cost much to make a barrel every time depending on what use you were using the gun for. 1 shot barrels would be great for certain situations while say target practicing it would get pretty expensive and not much fun after the few shots.
As for safety that would depend on what you are trying to accomplish.
I would think that all rifle rounds would be out of the question. as the high pressures that they excert when fired. But for smaller general round this could be easily accomplished. I would fire a .22 threw a plastic barrel (maybe) lol. As for say a 50cal that would be obvious that it wouldn't work. You would need a barrel with much greater strength.
If you are constructing a handgun styled gun. you could essentially drill your own as long as you had a way to drill it.
But until printers are cheaper ill still to my BP guns with a replaced cylinder. they come in all different sizes. .22 9mm 40 45 45colt and just about everything in between.
I wouldn't touch a BP gun with a "replaced cylinder" without doing some engineering analysis on the metals and the powder. Although as you not a 22 is trivial. Generally, though, the BP guns are rather interesting. BP is quite dangerous but the modern replacements are safer.
Until you've loaded up a black powder gun like a 1847 Colt Walker, tamped the charge down, squeezed the balls in, covered them with wax, set the primers, and pointed that thing downrange, you simply can't appreciate what those guys in the 19th century went through to keep their families safe and put food on the table.
As for 3d printers, they are here now and their abilities are here now...
I actually have several BP guns. All steel frames. You do not want to put the replaced cylinders in a brass framed BP revolver. Repeated pressures can damage the frame. The others that are an all steel frame are completely safe. I have shot thousands of rounds threw them.
I do like to pack my own rounds in from time to time. 44 cal round balls.
BP is pretty safe. As long as you know what it is. Main difference in powders is flash rate.
BP when reloaded in a cartridge has to be packed. While the newer powders can sit lose. You can pack 20 grains compared to say like 3 grains for the same boom factor. give or take. Newer powder is more stable but can have a bigger boom is contained and ignited compared to BP. I myself make my own black powder. Its fun and works well. i like to reload my 45 colt rounds with conicals for the BP revolvers.
Biggest thing about BP guns are to keep them clean. BP gets pretty dirty pretty fast compared to newer smokeless powders.
its a fun hobby and yet they can still be used for hunting and target practicing. And is way cheaper then buying ammo all the time just for tagret practicing.