:eat2: have yall checked out the defense dist site?
am go head and download all these files for um "study purposes"

:eat2: have yall checked out the defense dist site?
am go head and download all these files for um "study purposes"
my opinions on gun control aren't only based on 'mass shootings'
3D printing is gonna shake up a lot of things (and that's putting it lightly)
i download plans for a .223 and the software to manipulate it in less than 3 mins right now
3D printers are already getting close to the sub $1,000 mark
i download plans for a .223 and the software to manipulate it in less than 3 mins right now
3D printers are already getting close to the sub $1,000 mark
can these fukken things really manipulate anything?
gun powder?![]()
NBC's David Gregory Won't Be Charged With Gun Law Violation for Showing High Capacity Magazine on TV
NBC's David Gregory Won't Be Charged With Gun Law Violation for Showing High Capacity Magazine on TV
Washington D.C.'s attorney general said prosecuting Gregory wouldn't make citizens safer
Jan 13 by PolitixLisa
Lisa Fine, Staff Writer
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NBC's David Gregory has dodged a legal bullet. He won't be charged with violating any gun laws when he showed a high-capacity magazine on "Meet the Press" to make a point about how more gun control is needed.
Washington D.C. Attorney General Irvin B. Nathan said despite the violation he decided to exercise "prosecutorial discretion" to not pursue a criminal case because doing so wouldn't make the District safer, the Washington Post reports.
It is against the law in the District of Columbia to possess a device that holds more than 10 rounds of ammunition -- even if it's not attached to a firearm. Gregory showed the high capacity magazine clip when he was interviewing Wayne LaPierre, the CEO of the National Rifle Association, following the elementary school massacre in Newtown, Conn.
Influencing Nathan' decision was that Gregory's "intent of the temporary possession and short display of the magazine was to promote the First Amendment purpose of informing an ongoing public debate about firearms policy in the United States," he wrote in a letter to NBC.
I don't think you can make a very effective gun out of plastic yet. the barrel pretty much has to be metal, as well as things like springs (and of course the bullets)
Coat the inside of the barrel with something to keep the plastic from melting and place a metal tube inside the barrel that might keep it from being destroyed when you shoot it.
Stilll though, once that hammer hits the bullet its gonna be a problem for the back end of that gun.
Printing a gun and adding a few parts vs gunsmithing........I'm sayin, you can make a zip-gun without a 3D printer
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