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-   -   3D printers (http://netcees.org/showthread.php?t=43942)

PancakeBrah 01-06-2014 03:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by big baby (Post 243269)
remember that time you ignored my mentions?




yeah

I don't actually.

Show pls. Make tournament successful. Profit

Split 01-06-2014 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Batty (Post 243232)
Hahaha!!!

Forbes magazine > a netcee

Just saying.


So you cosign making your own bow and arrow is 9 billion times more reliable than a 3D printed gun?

The 3D is still gunna kill somebody, it just might randomly blow up on them. This does not mean there isn't some wigger out there who'd try it. All I'm sayin is that with the advancements in technology, people should take notice. I mean everybody else outside of NC is.

well, disagree with the first part. the precisions that even the most advanced 3D printers can reach are not near close enough for the parts in the firing mechanism. Lab tested is one thing. and that may be true. But amateurs or the general public cannot replicate these guns with these materials or equipment and attain the same level of precision/accuracy/reliability

However, there WILL be widely available printers that can 3D print metal parts, and it WILL change the entire industrial manufacturing industry.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/n...D-printer.html

uh-oh 01-06-2014 03:42 PM

yea thats one thing i remember too, even with the right schematics in the vice doc the dudes revolutionising this industry ended up having to shave parts off because stuff would come out a couple millimeters too big

Batty 01-06-2014 04:08 PM

Anybody consider that most of the stuff we are seeing is amatuer builds? I mean, the dude at the heart of the contraversy is Cody Wilson. He built the "Liberator" 3D printed handgun at his own home.

http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.c...-venture.html/

Quote:

Cody Wilson holding what he calls a Liberator pistol that was completely made on a 3-D-printer at his home in Austin, Texas. May 10, 2013

Same as the dude that made the AR-15 on a 3D printer...


Quote:

"At a local range, I loaded the magazine with .22 caliber ammo I purchased at the range. I inserted a magazine into the rifle, chambered a round, and squeezed the trigger . . . nothing. I had to experiment, but when I switched magazines, the gun worked. I fired off 10 rounds. At 50 feet, using a red dot sight, it was easy to place all of the hits into a quarter-size group at the center of the target. I shot another 50 rounds down range. Results of the test: The rifle is reliable, accurate and did not suffer any cracks or mechanical failures."

http://static3.businessinsider.com/i...eplicator2.jpg


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/i-3d-...#ixzz2pee0905U
and a real AR-15 is known to jam up quite a bit, lol


So for every story about irregular parts or failures there seems to be just as many success stories and from individuals rather than a big company. I mean, imagine what some big companies could do with this shit. Companies that could afford research teams and have access to better data and materials.

If you really wanna see shit get crazy, let them go back to seriously pushing some firearms bans. You will see this shit get really crazy, trust. People will be secretly building their own fully automatic rifles and there will be no proof of sale or proof of ownership/transaction/etc.

veritas 01-06-2014 04:12 PM

Batman owning itt.

uh-oh 01-06-2014 04:30 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DconsfGsXyA

there is cody wilson

watch the doc

they cannot make the ar15 part that actually fires the bullet

they cannot make the bullets

they make everything else

and the gun is everything but reliable

Batty 01-06-2014 04:57 PM



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