The 3D Gun Blueprints: How Viable Is It For Someone to Create a Working Gun?

3d-printer
3d-printer

 

Donald Laird, Instructor in the Computer Studies Department at Santa Rosa Junior College, on whether the average person can create a gun at home with a 3D Printer, what the quality of such a gun be, how rapidly the technology is advancing and the cost is falling, the kind of plastic these printers use and how high the quality is presently, and shares what he is teaching his students in relation to the 3D printer:

 

 

3D printing is any of various processes in which material is joined or solidified under computer control to create a three-dimensional object, with material being added together (such as liquid molecules or powder grains being fused together). 3D printing is used in both rapid prototyping and additive manufacturing (AM). Objects can be of almost any shape or geometry and typically are produced using digital model data from a 3D model or another electronic data source such as an Additive Manufacturing File (AMF) file (usually in sequential layers). There are many different technologies, like stereolithography (SLA) or fused deposit modeling (FDM). Thus, unlike material removed from a stock in the conventional machining process, 3D printing or AM builds a three-dimensional object from computer-aided design (CAD) model or AMF file, usually by successively adding material layer by layer.

The term “3D printing” originally referred to a process that deposits a binder material onto a powder bed with inkjet printer heads layer by layer. More recently, the term is being used in popular vernacular to encompass a wider variety of additive manufacturing techniques. United States and global technical standards use the official term additive manufacturing for this broader sense.