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