>Texas company WILL be allowed to publish instructions for 3-D printable firearms online after US judge DENIES plea from gun control groups >On Friday a federal judge denied gun control group efforts to block 3-D printable gun designs from being published online >Texas company Defense Distributed shared blueprints for 3-D printable guns >In 2013 the government told them to take them down leading to 2015 lawsuit >In June the US government allowed Defense Distributed to go on with blueprints >Gun control groups filed an appeal on Thursday as a last effort to block Trump administration's decision >Defense Distributed will be allowed to publish blueprints starting Wednesday
meanwhile, in France, we have twice as much violent crime rate as the US (782 violent crimes/100k people vs 386 violent crimes/100k people, in average) so fuck you, retarded cunt
The files to print these trigger mechanism parts are not hard to find. I don’t see how one group releasing the same files that lurk on Pirate Bay is even news worthy.
>explode your hand using a pirate bay plan: you're the one responsible >buy plans from a business, and still explode your hand: they're the ones responsible not really equivalent propositions
Leo Williams
Actually, the very same company discussed in the OP created and sells an open source CNC router specifically for manufacturing firearm components like AR-15 receivers and M1911 frames.
Matthew Edwards
Because it's now government sanctioned. There's plenty of cp on the internet would still be a big deal if it was legalized.
Brandon Ramirez
ah yes, a machine i have heard of them uses electricity
>block 3d print instructions >literally thousands of other websites offer instructions and you'd have no legal ground to stop them
Where they really expecting any other decision?
Levi Ramirez
I want 3D printed magazines. That would be the death of magazine restriction laws.
Jack Stewart
>too scared or (((sly)))
Carson Williams
Did they really think this was going to turn out any other way? It was some ridiculous Obama era attempt at stopping firearm schematics being distributed based on the pretense that putting them on the internet violated ITAR which is an opinion so vastly exceeds the scope of the law that the government lawyers arguing in favor of it should probably be disbarred just to make sure they don't fuck up this badly again.
>3D printing guns is legal >Blacks can't afford 3D printers >Blacks too dumb to even learn using 3D printers >Whites FTW
Isaiah Kelly
>A 3d printer costs about 300 a very shitty 3d printer costs that
Parker Adams
Can Europeans print 3d weapons? How the hell does it work.
If it does Europe may actually be saved in couple of decades cuz gov banned all guns.
Samuel Johnson
i made the shittiest one out of wood, spare printer parts, a soldering torch, arduino and custom electronics, the cost was about $150 after burning out a $75 transformer
Anthony Brown
>wood disgusting and stopped reading there
Jackson Stewart
And some dude running in Missouri is auctioning one off as a fundraiser.
Camden Brooks
this sounds like a sub-par 3d printer you've created there, my friend
Luis Walker
>jews aren't White Then why do their DNA tests come back as 100% European...
Josiah Fisher
He's printing zip guns, not artisan dildos. The dimensions and finish don't need to be perfect.
Benjamin Hernandez
they don't.
Joshua Taylor
layer adhesion does need to be perfect and it's not even remotely possible with a wobbly piece of shit printer
Carson Jenkins
>Fuck this gay crap You want a milling machine for ar15 receivers. Then you get an actual ar15
Asher Bennett
Watch any Jew on YT do a 23andme test, it always comes back 100% European
i'm not a gun smith but if you cast your gun parts, im pretty sure you will still need to machine them to get them to fit/work properly
Ryder Collins
It's not up for debate if wooden 3d printers work because you can find videos of them working. It's just a question of what kind of quality you get out of them.
Jonathan Hughes
Yep
You can use them for defense fine, and in war, to take out someone in an ambush and get a better weapon.
It's actually interesting how they can handle the pressures, even though it's above the rated burst pressure of the pipe. I'm assuming it's because the shells are a little smaller, so the expansion lowers the chamber pressure, and you also have actually 2 chambers for all intents.
Jordan Lee
>what kind of quality you get out of them certainly nothing close to what you need to withstand reliably shooting from it when your layers aren't precisely layed over the previous ones, you end up with weak pieces, prone to delamination and catastrophic failure and managing that takes having a sturdy printer, vibrating as little as possible wooden printer are mere toys to print ugly yoda dildos, not tools a reliable printer isn't that hard to build, but it costs an order of magnitude more than a wooden or similar flimsy crap (ie in the low thousands instead of a the low hundreds)
Blake Morris
have it. has problems. 1. weak spindle 2. jams up on chips 3. screw bolt slips when #2 happens 4. workpiece ruined when #3 happens 5. pain in the ass to recalibrate when #3 happens 6. No instructions from DD on how to do #5. Welcome to a new hobby learning how. 7. Horrible runout when it drills holes for the hammer/trigger pins. . . you do better with a drill press and template. 8. Really too small a bed for doing a lot of things. Works with Vcarve okay for small items. Again, welcome to a new hobby.
Ryan Gomez
>squirting out a gun from a toothpaste tube. Nope. Not gonna happen. ("weapon" pictured is good for ONE shot, then throw away)
You can use a pipe as a barrel since it'll be smoothbore either way (protip you could use the base segment of old telescoping car antennas for. 22 short zip gun barrels) and these things are made with a definitive lifespan in the dozens of shots fired maximum anyway.
doesn't mean the plastic upper won't blow in your hands would hardly trust one made with a decent printer and actually tough filament (nylon and PEEK, for instance, which aren't exactly easy to use, let alone cheap) for one shot, not to even speak of a dozen would never trust one made with a toy printer and toy filament
That's the point of 3D printing firearms. It doesn't matter if your government gives you the right to do it or not. The very fact that you can, with or without their permission, is one step in destroying gun control, and with it government control, world wide.
Ryan Perez
>doesn't mean the plastic upper won't blow in your hands Yes it does my man. For the low pressure cartridges you're going to be shooting out of these things (basically .22lr) you could make the "receiver" out of layered balsa wood and you'd be fine because all the pressure is going to be on the pipe barrel and the 3d printed portion just has to handle the recoil energy of that tiny little bullet leaving the barrel.
Adrian Roberts
you overestimate how tough pieces from shit printers are
Charles Torres
WOOPS. Don't download that anons, the government doesn't want you to have it.
I think it is like $500000 for those machines. Might as well get a full machine shop at that price.
3D printing is mostly useful for printing turbines, complex structures and prototyping.
Cameron Sanchez
Because it dealt with free speech as well as 2A, and the nature of certain firearms.
>Significantly, the government expressly acknowledges that non-automatic firearms up to .50-caliber – including modern semi-auto sporting rifles such as the popular AR-15 and similar firearms – are not inherently military.
Well then I suggest you hit the mill and start making some rooty tooty point and shooties the new old fashioned way.
Tyler Perry
You mistake me.
The bursting pressure of seamless piping is less than whatever shotgun shell you use -- they don't base it on being sealed, rather just how much is required within the pipe itself at any juncture.
A firearm will still blow up just fine if you exceed its tolerances, even though the projectile goes on its merry way still.
Ethan Richardson
we're not quite disarmed (yet) our #1 problem is we're not allowed to defend ourselves, and even less so with guns (we do that, they take it away, and we can't have any ever again) our #2 problem is ammo: they require range or hunting licenses to purchase ammo (that's the OK part), and we're pretty limited in the amount we can buy and store
John Sanchez
Do they make you turn the casings in? If not break out the reloading press and start pumping.
Cooper Torres
>Do they make you turn the casings in? nope, but we can store all reloading components we want anyway except powder, which is limited in the amount we can buy and keep...
Ian Robinson
>except powder, which is limited in the amount we can buy and keep... Start pissing in hay bails and smuggling primers from the US in your ass I guess.
Brandon Reyes
>In June the US government allowed Defense Distributed to go on with blueprints >Gun control groups filed an appeal on Thursday as a last effort to block Trump administration's decision What
>Government decides to do nothing >Gun control group TRIES TO BLOCK THIS FROM HAPPENING HOW