Monday, May 06, 2013

IT WORKS!

When WC posted this I wasn't quite sure how I felt about it. I have no problem with folks building their own firearm. But for heaven's sake, where's the wood? Where's the steel?

All the Glock and polymer-framed-pistol haters (not among them, love my Glocks and Sigs but I ,also love me a good wood and steel snubbie) are going to have a new one to make fun of.

Guess the only steel that matters is that coming out of the end of the barrel. In which case this functions just fine.

The Blaze:

Wiki Weapons Fires First 100% 3D-Printed Handgun

  • Defense Distributed’s Wiki-Weapons project fired the “Liberator,” its .380 handgun that was created completely with a 3D printer. 
  • The 15 of the 16 parts created using the technology took just 24 hours to print. 
  • The blueprint for the Liberator has been posted online, free for anyone to download. 
  • Lawmakers have since renewed calls for bans on 3D printed firearms that could be undetectable by security sensors. 

  • The Wiki-Weapons project by Defense Distributed, which has for months been striving toward its goal of creating a fully functional 3D-printed gun, has succeeded in the first tests of a firearm created using only a 3D printer.

    Although much of the project up until now has been showing off plastic printed components for rifles and magazines, the gun tested last week was a .380 handgun, which Defense Distributed founder Cody Wilson told TheBlaze in a phone interview Monday was always the goal to develop.

    Meet the “Liberator.”

    Defense Distributed Wiki Weapons Fires First Completely 3D Printed Handgun
    Cody Wilson firing the “Liberator,” Defense Distributed’s first fully function, 100 percent 3D-printed gun. (Image: YouTube screenshot)

    Wilson said that while they were waiting for their federal firearms license request to go through, something which was granted to them in March, they worked on printing the gun parts they legally could in the mean time. For weeks, the parts of the handgun were tested individually but on May 1 it all came together for its first shot.

    As a safety precaution, it was test fired remotely at first.

    “It was a big question mark. I was quite nervous, excited, giddy,” Wilson said.

    After the remote fire was successful, Wilson said he felt comfortable allowing it to be fired by hand.

    “I thought ‘oh my, this is going to work,’” he said.

    Defense Distributed Wiki Weapons Fires First Completely 3D Printed Handgun
    Set up for remote firing. (Photo: WikiWep DevBlog)

    When he fired it himself, he described it as feeling “pretty good.”

    “The action felt smooth. It fit together tightly,” he said.

    Watch Wilson fire the Liberator in this video:



    Fifteen components of the 16-piece firearm were created using the 3D printer plastic. Wilson estimated that it took 24 hours to print all the pieces with the largest component taking 10 hours. The one piece that was not printed was the firing pin, which he said was a matter of getting the correct hardness.

    Defense Distributed Wiki Weapons Fires First Completely 3D Printed Handgun
    Pieces of the Liberator. (Photo: WikiWep DevBlog)

    “You need a fine, hard point,” he said of the striking component of the gun.

    As Wilson has told TheBlaze in the past, much of the project, in addition to supporting the Second Amendment, is about protecting freedom of speech on the Internet.

    “If we truly believe information should be free, that the internet is the last bastion of freedom and knowledge, and that societies that share are superior to societies that censor and withhold, then why not guns?” Defense Distributed stated on its website.

    Defense Distributed Wiki Weapons Fires First Completely 3D Printed Handgun
    (Photo: WikiWep DevBlog)

    Within seven hours of posting the files on DEFCAD, the online forum where designs for 3D printed guns and components are posted, Wilson said people around the world are already downloading it.

    “There is a compelling feeling that you need to have it, to propagate it, to spread it,” Wilson said of the availability of the file.

    Within hours of photos of the Liberator being posted by Forbes Friday, Rep. Steve Israel (D-NY) renewed his plea for the passage of the Undetectable Firearms Modernization Act.

    “Security checkpoints, background checks, and gun regulations will do little good if criminals can print plastic firearms at home and bring those firearms through metal detectors with no one the wiser,” Israel said in a statement. “When I started talking about the issue of plastic firearms months ago, I was told the idea of a plastic gun is science-fiction. Now that this technology appears to be upon us, we need to act now to extend the ban on plastic firearms.”

    New York Sen. Charles Schumer jumped on board Sunday calling the creation of undetectable firarms ”stomach-churning.” With this technology, Schumer said he believed people could ”open a gun factory in their garage.”

    Wilson said as he understands the current bill — which would make it illegal to manufacture, own, transport, buy or sell any firearm, receiver or magazine that was undetectable by metal detectors or X-ray machines — it would not apply to licensed firearm manufacturers, which would make Defense Distributed exempt. But Wilson said he is worried about its potential passage in how it would impact the average citizen.

    “It looks like they stand a fair chance of regulating 3D printing,” Wilson said, noting he is more concerned about provisions included that would ban people from making 3D printed components like rifle receivers and high-capacity magazines.

    “It’s not about security,” Wilson said, continuing on in his perspective of the bill. It’s about making it more difficult for people to “quickly make 3D-printed gun parts.”

    Forbes noted that Defense Distributed included a six-ounce, non-functional metal piece in the Liberator specifically so the firearm could be detectable.

    Defense Distributed Wiki Weapons Fires First Completely 3D Printed Handgun
    (Photo: WikiWep DevBlog)

    As for Defense Distributed’s project going forward, Wilson said there is plenty of work to do. For the “Liberator,” Wilson said he thinks it’s a little overbuilt, meaning he is sure there are improvements they can make on the design to allow it to be printed on cheaper 3D printers. He also said he wanted to work on testing different barrel sizes.

    7 comments:

    Christine said...

    Not sure I'm comfortable with a gun that can get through security undetected.

    Charles Martel said...

    A few months ago CSI NY showed an episode with one of these firearms, but made it sound like that the actual like it was way out in the future.

    This is troubling given it can bypass any metal detector. I agree with Christine.

    Unknown said...

    You know guys a 'weapon' like this won't show up on airport scanners, advertising this will only get potential terrorist on the right track.
    Soon it will be full pat downs on ever airport.
    As a 'frequent flyer' it doesn't make me feel much safer.

    midnight rider said...

    As a legally armed American that doesn't really bother me all that much. But then again I believe the 2nd Amendment should be the only license to carry you need, that there is nothing crazy about guns in a bank, an armed guard in schools or being allowed to carry your gun on a plane. Had some of the victims of the 9/11 flights been allowed to be armed thee may have been a much different outcome. Certainly it wouldn't be any worse. And remember, those hijackers didn't use guns, but boxcutters and ceramic knives.

    Maybe the better idea, in light of these kinds of developments, is tom be rid of gun free zones altogether. So if someone gets a bug up his ass and pulls one of these with a small (but still effective) .380 round in it then maybe someone will put him down with a legally carried 9mm or 45 acp from a good old wood and steel Roscoe.

    Additionally, the gun s made with one steel part apparently AND they'd still have to et the ammo past the metal detectors.

    christian soldier said...

    I'm w/you-MR!!

    We've been 'buying' the line of the left for too long--

    When We are armed- they the THEY will think twice!!

    Carol-CS

    Epaminondas said...

    This is NOTHING.
    Just wait.

    Technology and inventiveness is the enemy of security in every way.

    And there is no stopping it.

    Time to control alcohol on planes because every mother is going to be armed so they can blow away the next moron with box cutters

    Nicoenarg said...

    Oh and the scanners only give a false sense of security. Not sure how airports in America work but in most airports around the world it would take only one corrupt airport official who lets through a rifle or a bomb or an individual who shouldn't be on that plane and the rest will be history.

    At my airline we had a senior pilot who got through all the regional airports, then European ones and back to home base through all security checks with an ID that had the picture of his dog on it.

    Anyway, if you don't protect yourself, no one else will. You will just have a false sense of security, thats all.