Wednesday, April 21, 2021

"I Shoot a Bunch of 3D Printed Guns - Do My Hands Survive?"




So far so good.  Forever, a firearm was a precision manufactured item able to tough it out.  Ammunition not so much.

It follows that printed firearms can be designed around a ammo type and can use obvious fixes to gain the desired result.

It is obviously easy to fabricate a morter.  A little technical knowledge on metal pipes will go a long way.

applying the same rough and ready thinking, it is possible to even imagine a useful rifle barrel that is good enough for a handful of shots before it is taken out and discarded.


Recall that we gave up trying to reach out and touch you at a thousand yards in the jungles of Vietnam.

My point is that weapons can be designed and implimented across an entire population literally overtnight that are good enough to make any enemy give pause. Again recall that marines armed with the M 14 .hit the dirt when confronted with the AK 47.  Not so with the M 16.  That is what i mean by giving pause.



"I Shoot a Bunch of 3D Printed Guns - Do My Hands Survive?"

BY TYLER DURDEN
FRIDAY, APR 16, 2021 - 11:20 PM


A decentralized network of 3D printed gun advocates is mobilizing online and quickly revolutionizing gun designs, sharing blueprints, advice, and building a community. There's no easy way the federal government can halt this movement as President Biden, not too long ago, declared war on "ghost guns."

YouTuber Sean with "The 3D Print General" attended "Bear Arms N' Bitcoin" on April 10-11 in Texas. The first day involved top experts and practitioners that gave the audience actionable steps on how to print 3D guns at home. The second day, readers should be excited for this, was when Sean attended "shooting rad guns" day.










The event was held at Onion Creek Gun Club, located in Austin, Texas. Sean shot various 3D-printed weapons, such as the FGC-9, which stands for "f**k gun control 9 mm." As we've noted, the FGC-9 can be printed entirely at home for the cost of $350, including the printer's cost.



In the video "I Shoot a Bunch of 3D Printed Guns - Do My Hands Survive?" Sean test-fired an array of 3D-printed guns. In the last decade, the printing technology behind these weapons without serial numbers has drastically improved that it's rare a gun explodes in someone's hand as the early models did. Sean proves it; not one of these guns he fired at the range exploded in his hand. In fact, some of the weapons appeared to be high-tech or even futuristic.



Without further adieu, here's Sean test firing 3D printed weapons.



When it comes to the Biden administration waging war on ghost guns - well - good luck, what are they going to do - ban printers?

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