Polymer fixing

I know everybody is going to say

>BUY A NEW FRAME

this is for educational purposes, SHTF, you only have a broken gun and basic tools materials around

how would you attempt to fix a structural damage on a poly frame?

Attached: Broken-Glock.jpg (320x240, 30K)

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Whittle a wooden frame of course

FIND a new one.

my bet would be metal pins and a flexible epoxy, maybe for cyano to hold it together while the epoxy cures

make it bulky, put as much material as possible that doesnt interfere with the mechanism

Fuck polymer

in the meantime?

I image you have to make it fat, how to do fit the slide?, insert the rails on the wood?

>this is for educational purposes, SHT
Yeah you all can stop reading there

they say a true master craftsman is not the one that can work flawlessly, but the one that can fix anything!

i cant imagine that the guy who shot that gun had a good time

do you he lost any fingers?

Attached: plastic welder.jpg (1200x1200, 313K)

get a gun that isn't plastic shit

There is no way to fix a polymer gun frame with this type of polymer. Many of these polymers have EXTREMELY high melting temperatures, obtaining this temperature may not be hard but you will potentially hurt the structure of the rest of the gun by doing this. Your mends will ALWAYS be significantly weaker than the rest of the gun.

Just buy a new fucking frame, stop asking these questions

I'd probably draw up a cad file on my computer of the old frame, and machine a new one out of steel or aluminum.

>wood

Attached: give you wood.jpg (640x480, 33K)

brownells.com/aspx/learn/learndetail.aspx?lid=10437

this'll tell you how to repair frames

Where do I get one of these?

>plastic
>fucking
>firearms

FUCK OFF, you brought that on yourself

Attached: Sage.jpg (1600x1200, 396K)

interesting, so the slide rides the wood? (lol)

you make it bucko

hot air, also interesting, maybe attaching a hose to a heatgun it can be done

That looks more like hydro-dip than actual chunk of wood.

its not like the movies and videogames

you can pick up weapons off the dead and use them

I dunno user, that sounds a lot like videogames

You probably won't be able to.

They aren't intended to be repaired, they were always designed to be replaced. Frankly, the same could be said of nearly any gun that has such a catastrophic failure as that photo. That's how it goes.

Get a gun where frames can be readily replaced?

The strongest glue I can find and duct tape until I can acquire a new gun/frame.
The frame, under normal conditions (read: No case ruprute from double charge or firing into an obstructed barrel) barely bears any pressure at all, all the action happens in the slide.
That said, maybe reinforce the remaining frame with a small wire or piece of metal to make a full-lenght slide rail

JB Weld.

Attached: jbweld.jpg (414x790, 71K)

>It's not like the movies or video games
>There will be a constant supply of dead combatants that you can loot

Send it in to the manufacturer.
Glock charges $150 for a new lower but if you send yours in they replace it for $43.

Attached: 1532255258749.jpg (720x720, 69K)