This blog is about 3D printable gun designs online.
I found this website http://www.guncad.org/Gun_Cad_Files/Index.htm, with a lot of 3D printable gun designs you can check out for yourself:
The Ruger LCP – 380 (yes, it prints in one piece). This gun does not require any additional metal to have it function. It has a built in safety that prevents the hammer from striking the firing pin without the trigger being pulled. The firing pin is concealed until the trigger is pulled.
This product is made available as an unlicensed and unrestricted digital file that can be used on any digital or analog 3d printer capable of printing many small parts. In order to produce them, a 3d printer must be able to print and use support material as well as print small parts (0.2 inches) and fine details (0.04 inches).
Aaawww, poor little rich boy! Frustrated with the fact that his daddy won’t buy him a real gun, he decided to make himself one? How brave! I guess my .38 special revolver isn’t good enough for you, eh?
Here are a few 3D printable gun designs you can download and print at home.
The collection of 3D printable gun designs is growing fast. Within the last year, we added many new FDM (fused deposition modeling) 3D printable gun designs to our collection of 3D printable guns on GrabCAD. And here are a few to get you started:
Pistol design by daniel_a_smith:
Handgun design by rook788:
Revolver design by rook788:
Submachine Gun design by rook788:
The latest in 3D printed weapons technology is now available for download from GrabCAD, as well as from other sites like Thingiverse and Youmagine. Many of these designs are created by hobbyists and are not necessarily very safe, but some designs have been thoroughly tested for safety. It is important to remember that a seemingly simple change to the design or material can make the difference between a fun project for you or your kids, or something potentially lethal. Please take the time to read over any documentation that comes with the models before printing them!
3D printing is still in its infancy. We’re really only starting to understand all the amazing things it can do. For example, did you know that you can make guns with a 3D printer? And they’re not just little plastic guns either. You can make a gun out of metal.
I’ll admit that I’m a bit confused as to why anyone would want to print their own gun. First of all, if you have access to a printer and the plans for making a gun, you probably have access to an actual gun as well, like from your local gun shop or something. Second, if you don’t have access to an actual gun, then there are still plenty of other options for hurting people that don’t require having a 3D printer available such as hitting them with a hammer or stabbing them with a stick or something.
That being said, I thought I’d share some of the cool designs that I’ve found online for 3D printed guns in case anyone wants to print one themselves. You can check them out below and see which one you like best!
I recently published a post about 3D printable gun designs. I didn’t write the post to encourage violence, and I don’t intend for it to be misused. However, I think that access to information is more important than preventing any harm that might come from that information.
The problem with guns is that they are decidedly low-tech. It’s one of the reasons why people love them, but it also means that 3D printing could potentially make them easier than ever to get your hands on.
Thingiverse user Defcad has uploaded over a dozen gun designs for anyone to print out. You can grab any of these files for free and print them out on your own 3D printer, or you can order a physical copy from someone who does. There are a lot of them to choose from, but here are just a few:
1) The Liberator: Perhaps the most famous of all the gun files on Thingiverse, this is the same design that Defense Distributed made headlines with last year…
2) The AR15 lower receiver: This is a lower receiver for an AR-15 rifle – the first piece you need to build an AR-15 rifle. It was originally designed by Defense Distributed and uploaded to Thingiverse in 2013.
3) The Beretta M9 pistol: This is another gun design originally created by Defense Distributed. It’s a little less detailed than some of the others, but it’s still impressive…
4) A 1911 model handgun: If you’re looking for something more traditional
As a professional gunsmith and machinist I was excited to discover the work of Ed Leedskalnin, a Latvian immigrant who built Coral Castle. Using only hand tools and some mathematical tricks, he cut and moved tons of coral to create fantastic structures that still baffles scientists today.
Tallulah Bankhead was born on January 31, 1903 in Huntsville, Alabama. She was the daughter of John Hollis Bankhead and Ella Adelaide (Cross) Bankhead. Talluha had two siblings: William Brockman Bankhead, who died as an infant, and Mary Elizabeth Bankhead-Todd, known as “Mellie”. The family lived in Jasper, Alabama where John was a lawyer representing local coal mines.
As a child Tallulah hated her first name, which she thought sounded like a horse’s name. Her grandmother suggested that she should be called “Tallu”, instead. At age seven she underwent surgery on her ears to correct a birth defect called “spastic mastoiditis”. The surgery left her nearly deaf and fearing she would go deaf she refused to speak for six months afterwards. Her hearing gradually returned but her ear remained disfigured.
After graduating from high school Tallulah began acting with a stock