By: Zach Walton
Thanks for clearing that up. The forum post made it seem like you also printed the upper. I have made the necessary corrections.
View ArticleBy: Warren
Umm that’s not a 22 bullet in the picture it’s a 223 and the mag is for a 223 as well.. so what’s the go?
View ArticleBy: Matt
Even if he only produced the lower assembly, that would also mean he could easily produce the m16 full auto hammer group which otherwise is unavailable to typical consumers…. That’d be more sensational.
View ArticleBy: Ryan Dempsey
I think the firearm pic with the translucent mag is 22lr. The full sized AR15 below is a 223.
View ArticleBy: Ryan Dempsey
Guns aren’t rocket surgery. Never were. People have been building guns with all sorts of methods and materials for a long time.
View ArticleBy: Ft. Defiance
Matt that is not quite correct. The bolt needs to be compatible with a full auto sear and trigger assembly. Those bolts are not readily available as they are manufactured for mil spec(auto capable arms)
View ArticleBy: Mechatronic
I’m a product design engineer (ME, EE) and I’ve been using rapid prototyping for the last 15 years. It has made great strides but is still not remotely up to injection molded or machined parts. It’s...
View ArticleBy: Cartridge James
Yup, he printed a gun part. I suppose eventually you could end up printing the entire object? The headline “jumped the gun” a little it seems hyuk hyuk
View ArticleBy: Mike
the only part that has a serial number is the lower….NOT the fire group (ie trigger hammer seer springs etc). To build your own AR15 only the lower needs a Brady clearance….the rest is like a Barbie...
View ArticleBy: Raven Madd
This I feel will fuel the race for 3D Printers. There was some ethical discussion on 3dprinterxyz.com about 3D printing guns as well as views from a legal side of view. It’s a grey area but one wonders...
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