General GunTuber thread

If there's already a good guide, why does it matter the guncad guys aren't doing one?
They’re the most vocal and their Twitter antics about “gun control is useless because of 3D printers” annoy me. It is still a very real threat, and I don’t think the majority of the community (obviously not people like JStark) realize that they won’t be able to get fired 9mm cases, nail gun blanks, Glock parts, and AR uppers in a highly regulated environment.
Don't think of 3d printed guns as a replacement for a KAC AR, think of them as a modern equivalent of the Liberator pistol, or Blyskawica SMG. Insurgency tools, not battle rifles.
Oh I don’t. Outside of the polymer framed pistols, which perform identically to the “real thing” (and maybe the printed AR lowers, but the quality and durability is way worse than a proper polymer lower like the KP-15 (I’m disappointed that it wasn’t financially viable for them to make an 80% version)), they are modern Liberators. The vocal part of their community does act like they are justasgood as “real” firearms though.
 
how to make large number of cases
What do you think is a large number of cases? If you're planning to fend off an ATF raid in the next two weeks, yeah you might not get a full combat load worth of them.
I see it like long term food storage, you don't get a pantry full of it expecting a full blown collapse right now. If you can make a magazine's worth of casings in a Sunday, you're off to a good start.
(the ScienceMadness stuff for example, though they aren't the only ones, though last I checked that wasn't an easy to follow guide that normal people could do). The best guide I've seen for powder is by an anon from /k/ and uses ping pong balls and haven't found one for primers yet.
The sciencemadness thing isn't meant to be a guide, they wanted to avoid the bad reputation pyro forums usually get and wouldn't spoonfeed as much as other places.
Aardvark Reloading has like 4-5 primer composition alternatives.
But I understand why they haven't released a guide. They'd need to gather information to let people navigate the process on how to get precursors on multiple countries (you can make them, but that just adds to the complexity), and then deal with the fact that they'd have all sorts of brainlets pepper their faces with Chinese glass when their synthesis of nitrocellulose went wrong, or suffocated themselves in the red fumes. If you're the kind of person who'd be able to follow their guide without killing yourself, you can do it without them having to release a guide.
They’re the most vocal and their Twitter antics about “gun control is useless because of 3D printers” annoy me
You have to think that it annoys the antis. Just see it as a demoralization effort.
That Albert9x19 guy had some replies to tweets that got deleted. Inferring the context from what he wrote in his replies and the videos/images, he was replying to people saying "you can't make your own ammo" with posts proving he made his own gunpowder. I assume those people deleted their replies out of embarrassment. Does it change much? No. But a lot of propaganda is meant to demoralize us. These twitter reply guys are demoralizing them.
 
Read back up to 295 to catch up but kinda got lazy after that. Nice to know Karl is keeping up with his antics.


I agree that Karl is like that irl, but in the video he seems to have boiled himself down to a caricature just for the bit. This video actually shows some self-awareness from his part.
Problem is that he returns to his annoying real self when he's back in front of his keyboard.

Well, there's the M80A1 round, which is the Big Boy™ version of M855A1.
View attachment 3214491
I have a different take, though. We should increase chamber pressures if the Sig case design is that good. Do some fancy EDM shit on barrels and create relief cuts that don't disturb the rifling to get sharp pressure drop close to the uncorking of the bullet at the muzzle. Short cans at the end. Fuck it, we 5.56 Magnum now.

Was actually talking to my brother about this. Would be baller as fuck to have M855A1 and Mk.318 go nearly M193 speeds. I mean, I'm sure there'll be problems as the Sig Spear hasn't even reached testing with soldiers and I'm sure that extra pressure hasn't been tested as much as they hope we think they did, but I think it'd be pretty fuckin' neat.

The analogy of car seats only really works for things like adjustable stocks, we let people adjust controls or seating because everyone has a different body. Can you imagine how fucked every car would be if we put a knob on the dash that let people adjust the air fuel mixture? Or the suspension? You can really fuck up a car by messing with important functions and even make it dangerous.

You sound like a giga-jew-hyper-tranny-freedom-hating-nigger-lover with your desire of restricting my ability to make mistakes. So to put it into an example that will make you happy and I posit this response:

It's like being not able to choose what Bad Dragon dildo will go up your ass, or if it has a cum hose attached or not. You can meet an end with a Mr. Hands level of Dragon cock, or you can get a one-inch goblin penis with a grain silo worth of fake cum pumped up your colon, but if you can choose your choice of ass destruction, life is much more enjoyable.
"This is a bad analogy" No u nigger.

Edit: Forgot to add 'Freedom hating'
 
God damn, we just had a containment breach from Animal Control.

Anyway...
More like the recent crackdown on 80% build kits. They're not going after printed stuff at all.
They're not going after printed stuff yet.

Unless there's a huge traumatic event that gets the mummified corpses in Congress to stir in their crypts, the political process tends to lag pretty hard behind technology. Add to it the fact that while it's getting popular 3D printing is still a very niche thing and they wouldn't even know what to do. But just wait a while. Give it 5 or 10 years of this bullshit and they'll be trying to scour the internet for gun schematics and attempting to class 3D printers as controlled items.
 
They teased the CETME C printed receiver but didn't release it for over 6 months. Someone prominent in the community also released his own CETME receiver in response to AWCY not releasing theirs and it seems to have upset them as well.
Was that the hand bomb I saw on /k/ once? Someone showed a CETME parts kit build with a 3D printed receiver, and this fucking thing gives me anxiety just thinking about it.
cetme deathtrap.jpg

Look at this ugly piece of shit. Makes me think of those old FA91 rifles with cast aluminum receivers, which had their trunnions fastened with epoxy. I wonder how the trunnion is held in place on this thing? Just embedded into the printed polymer or something?

He wanted something that would keep the friction up. On the comments section Mr Snow (another 3d printing gun tuber) did say that lubrication had an effect on the cycling so that confirms it's all friction based.
Wow, friction delayed blowback, they could have a springloaded angled wedge for what it matters.
 
Was that the hand bomb I saw on /k/ once? Someone showed a CETME parts kit build with a 3D printed receiver, and this fucking thing gives me anxiety just thinking about it.
cetme deathtrap.jpg

Look at this ugly piece of shit. Makes me think of those old FA91 rifles with cast aluminum receivers, which had their trunnions fastened with epoxy. I wonder how the trunnion is held in place on this thing? Just embedded into the printed polymer or something?
That thing scares me just looking at it. The most concerning part is I doubt they've actually done a destructive failure test on one either so who knows how this thing acts during a potential catastrophic failure.
 
Was that the hand bomb I saw on /k/ once? Someone showed a CETME parts kit build with a 3D printed receiver, and this fucking thing gives me anxiety just thinking about it.
View attachment 3258330
Look at this ugly piece of shit. Makes me think of those old FA91 rifles with cast aluminum receivers, which had their trunnions fastened with epoxy. I wonder how the trunnion is held in place on this thing? Just embedded into the printed polymer or something?


Wow, friction delayed blowback, they could have a springloaded angled wedge for what it matters.
That's the Amigo Grande, a gatalog/ctrl-pew design. They work pretty well until you do a few mag dumps and the section holding lockup gets warm and soft.

Like most of the printed designs, the lockup is all metal from the stock gun, so it shouldn't explode.

That thing scares me just looking at it. The most concerning part is I doubt they've actually done a destructive failure test on one either so who knows how this thing acts during a potential catastrophic failure.
Fucking pussy.

Edit: the designs you actually have to worry about are the smaller caliber guns that are simple blowback since due to the possibility of out of battery detonation. What's a CETME's roller system going to fail to? Something melts, well it won't feed or eject right. All of the lockup failures are the same ones on the original gun. There's no extra risk from plastic receivers in this kind of design.
 
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I wonder how the trunnion is held in place on this thing? Just embedded into the printed polymer or something?
There's a 3d printed two-piece clamshell that engages the trunnion profile, which gets pressed into the receiver and bolted from the sides.
 
Like most of the printed designs, the lockup is all metal from the stock gun, so it shouldn't explode

So you're saying that if dump some mags, I can bring a funky lookin' piece of melted chocolate to a 3-gun match?

Do people really not know any basic sheet metal fab?

No cuz it's too dangewous...

But really, people don't want to figure out or want to learn how to run a mill, lathe with a milling attachment or a CNC machine. Not to mention go sending metal filings all over the place. This is not even including the special two words everyone hates 'Limited Space'.
 
So you're saying that if dump some mags, I can bring a funky lookin' piece of melted chocolate to a 3-gun match?



No cuz it's too dangewous...

But really, people don't want to figure out or want to learn how to run a mill, lathe with a milling attachment or a CNC machine. Not to mention go sending metal filings all over the place. This is not even including the special two words everyone hates 'Limited Space'.
It's more than two mags to get a point of aim drop. It'll die before you melt it visibly. I can't remember how many mags they got on PLA+ before it just shits itself.

And on sheet metal fab... Most people don't have the money or space for the equipment. 3-D printers take a few cubic feet.
 
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So you're saying that if dump some mags, I can bring a funky lookin' piece of melted chocolate to a 3-gun match?



No cuz it's too dangewous...

But really, people don't want to figure out or want to learn how to run a mill, lathe with a milling attachment or a CNC machine. Not to mention go sending metal filings all over the place. This is not even including the special two words everyone hates 'Limited Space'.
You can nigger-rig together a shitty tube gun with nothing more than a vice, angle grinder, hammer, drill (preferably a bench drill), a welder and some measuring and scribing tools. Tube stock is already a basic receiver and you could make a trunnion out of bar stock with some holes drilled into it.

I know it sounds like a lot, but it's really only just basic garage tools and the right materials.
 
You can nigger-rig together a shitty tube gun with nothing more than a vice, angle grinder, hammer, drill (preferably a bench drill), a welder and some measuring and scribing tools. Tube stock is already a basic receiver and you could make a trunnion out of bar stock with some holes drilled into it.

I know it sounds like a lot, but it's really only just basic garage tools and the right materials.
The luty and cheetah are that type of DIY garage gun. People are designing hybrids where the non-stressed parts are printed which allows them to print more complicated shapes to accommodate the more simplistic metal parts. The Cheetah's frame is 3D printed and, iirc, there is a hybrid Luty as well.
And another
CHEETAH-9-1.jpg
 
You can nigger-rig together a shitty tube gun with nothing more than a vice, angle grinder, hammer, drill (preferably a bench drill), a welder and some measuring and scribing tools. Tube stock is already a basic receiver and you could make a trunnion out of bar stock with some holes drilled into it.

I know it sounds like a lot, but it's really only just basic garage tools and the right materials.
Or you can do something that's close to factory accurate with $250 and some plastic for a loss of durability in your apartment. It's not hard to see why printing caught on. What you're describing has been possible since home power tools were a thing. The market is at saturation. The people who want to do that already do that and have their own cliques.
3D printing is new and growing. We went from the Liberator to the FGC9 and tons of very durable AR lowers in a decade. It'll run out of steam and stagnate, but that'll be a few years yet.
 
It's more than two mags to get a point of aim drop. It'll die before you melt it visibly. I can't remember how many mags they got on PLA+ before it just shits itself.

And on sheet metal fab... Most people don't have the money or space for the equipment. 3-D printers take a few cubic feet.
A plastic HK rifle that suffers POI shift when you mag dump it? Truly everything old is new again
 
The luty and cheetah are that type of DIY garage gun. People are designing hybrids where the non-stressed parts are printed which allows them to print more complicated shapes to accommodate the more simplistic metal parts. The Cheetah's frame is 3D printed and, iirc, there is a hybrid Luty as well.
View attachment 3258516
This seems like the best and most practical way of doing it, but it's still going to need some basic metalworking.
 
It seems like the fundamental problem with the 3D Printed community is that their currency is social credit in the form of notoriety/renown/respect vs actual cash. Accordingly people get ass mad if the “wrong” people get too much social credit. It doesn’t surprise me that there’s a disproportionately large number of socially maladjusted people attracted to this stuff, and therefore their interactions with each other are strained when combined with the above.

I find the stuff a lot of these guys are making intellectually interesting because they’re able to go through 10 generations of revisions in a very short period of time that we simply can’t do in real firearms manufacturing because of tooling cost. I could easily see some of these designs being matured through this process and picked up by real manufacturers; that is assuming it wouldn’t turn into a mess of lawsuits over who did what to the design and wants credit for it.
 
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