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Basically the only part that is printed is the frame/lower, the rest is a normal parts kit, with a barrel and a slide that you'd use one any other non-printed glock.

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Thank you. I just have a big fucking problem when the news says people are 3D printing guns. It’s like someone 3D printing a head cover and the news tells people someone 3D printed a car engine.

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There are fully 3D printed guns, like the Liberator (in which even the the barrel and springs for the hammer and the trigger are actually printed).

It is good for a single shot or barely a couple if you reload it with a lighter powder charge, but the ideia is to use it to "liberate" a better gun, like the original liberators during WW2.

For when you really can't get a "real" gun and getting some pipes and making a four winds shotgun is somehow out of question, this is a great alternative.

There's also the FGC, which have most of the parts printed, but still needs a metal barrel (hidraulic tubing and collar shafts) and a bolt (steel bars welded together) and springs.

[–] 1 pt

Thank you. I would have to rethink my stay alive strategy if I was in a situation where it was impossible for me to acquire a gun for protection. First off, gun is great in a self defense car jacking or home invasion. If the swat team is coming for you, you’re dead. A group of bandits blast into your house, your dead. During civil war, I would leave the city and find a new friend with a gun. So many variables. But alas, I’m on a farm far from a city, and (clears throat) prepared for...well you know.

[–] 1 pt

the lower is the only part you need to register in most states