It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
www.cbsnews.com...
A Texas man has become the first person to successfully fire a real bullet from a gun that was created on a home 3D printer. Sounds crazy? In fact, the blueprint for the pistol is available for free online for anyone to access. And it's legal.
University of Texas law student Cody Wilson, 25, released a video of a 3D-printed gun named the "Liberator" taking test shots over the weekend. The gun is mostly made of plastic, with the exception of two metal pieces: a metal firing pin and a six ounce piece of steel that is required by law under the Undetectable Firearms Act. Of course, the piece of steel that makes the weapon visible to metal detectors, and legal, can certainly be omitted by future hobbyists.
"Guns are made out of plastic, so they would not be detectable by a metal detector at any airport or sporting event," Schumer said.
Originally posted by AfterInfinity
reply to post by extraterrestrialentity
This application has just as much potential for harm as it does for good. Printing artillery at home? Does it get more "terrorist" than that?edit on 6-5-2013 by AfterInfinity because: (no reason given)
If the blueprints are already out there, then it's probably already too late to ban anything.
I would print one just to shoot the damn thing at a target in my backyard, does it get more 'terrorist' than that? It then would collect dust, or come out when someone else wants to check it out.
Also, some people actually take life seriously enough to not use the word 'terrorist' loosely. That's just some people I guess.
Originally posted by snowspirit
reply to post by cleverhans
If the blueprints are already out there, then it's probably already too late to ban anything.
At the time I watched our afternoon news, they said the site already had 800,000 downloads for the blueprints.
Also, that the 3D printer only costs approx $800.
They also reminded Canadians that in Canada, it's illegal for citizens to manufacture guns.
Originally posted by AfterInfinity
reply to post by retirednature
I would print one just to shoot the damn thing at a target in my backyard, does it get more 'terrorist' than that? It then would collect dust, or come out when someone else wants to check it out.
Also, some people actually take life seriously enough to not use the word 'terrorist' loosely. That's just some people I guess.
I'm sensing a touch of contempt behind that post. In case it wasn't obvious from the quotation marks, the word "terrorist" was used in the sense that the government keeps applying it. And yes, they do tend to swing it around in a rather broad circle. Don't blame me for it, I'm just taking my cue from previous examples. Like Tupac's godmother.