Like & Subscribe For More Videos! Buy Cheap Games & Tech Here: dopesoner.com Stay up to date with projects, news, and giveaways! Firearm Discussion and Resources from AR-15, AK-47, Handguns and more! Buy, Sell, and Trade your Firearms and Gear.
In its continuing mission to build a “Wiki Weapon,” Defense Distributed has 3D printed the lower receiver of an AR-15 assault rifle and tested it to failure — on video (embedded below). The printed part only survives the firing of six shots, but for a first attempt that’s quite impressive. And hey, it’s a plastic gun.
We covered the first 3D-printed gun back in July. The Defense Distributed group sprung up soon after, with the purpose of creating an open-source gun — a Wiki Weapon — that can be downloaded from the internet and printed out. The Defense Distributed manifesto mainly quotes a bunch of historical figures who supported the right to bear arms. DefDist (its nickname) is seeking a gun manufacturing license from the ATF, but so far the feds haven’t responded.
Unperturbed, DefDist started down the road by renting an advanced 3D printing machine from Stratasys — but when the company found out what its machine was being used for, it was repossessed. DefDist has now obtained a 3D printer from Objet, which seemingly has a more libertarian mindset. The group then downloaded HaveBlue’s original AR-15 lower receiver from Thingiverse, printed it out on the Objet printer using ABS-like Digital Material, screwed it into an AR-57 upper receiver, loaded up some FN 5.7x28mm ammo, and headed to the range.
As you can see in the video above, after six shots the lower receiver quite literally (and humorously) falls to pieces. In this case, it seems like the ring thread that screws onto the upper receiver was fractured by the recoil forces. The DefDist team will now make various modifications to HaveBlue’s design, such as making it more rugged and improving the trigger guard, and then upload the new design to Thingiverse. Thus the open-source circle is complete!
Suffice it to say, the idea that people can download and print their own guns is rather scary. In current law, the lower receiver is the firearm — the lower receiver is the part that is regulated, and the part that bears the serial number. The ability to print your own lower receiver could allow people without gun licenses, or revoked licenses, to obtain a gun.
For now, of course, we should be pacified by the knowledge that consumer-grade printers draw the line at plastic — and it’s unlikely that gun barrels, springs, and other assorted parts can be fashioned out of plastic. In an industrial setting, though, 3D printing processes such as selective laser melting/sintering (SLM, SLS) are being used to create incredibly rugged parts out of metal. NASA, for example, is producing rocket parts with 3D printing. It is really only a matter of time until everyone has the hardware at home to print a complete firearm — or, well, any weapon really.
Now read: 3D printing: a replicator and teleporter in every home
This is a list of notable 3D printed weapons and parts. The table below lists noteworthy 3D printed weapons and parts of weapons as well as items with a defense-related background. It includes 3D printed weapons and parts created using plastic producing printers as well as metal producing printers.
The Liberator .380 was the first 3D printed plastic gun. It was a single shot pistol made using a Stratasys Dimension SST 3-D printer.[1][2]
The Solid Concepts replica of Browning 1911 was the first 3D printed metal gun[3][3][4][4] created using more than 38 printed parts;[5] it successfully fired more than 600 bullets without damaging the gun.[4] The metal printer used to create the weapon cost between US$500,000 to $1 million at the time the gun was created (November 2013).[4]
List of weapons and parts[edit]
- Key/Legend
Ar-15 Lower Receiver
Plastic -Weapon/Part used plastic 3D-printerMetal -Weapon/Part used metal 3D-printer Both -Weapon/Part uses both metal and plastic 3D-printers
Name | Date made public | Type of weapon/part or other | Printing method | Printer used | Creator | Noteworthy facts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Raptor Grip M500[6] | 2011-12December 15, 2011[7][8][9][10][11] | Part:Mossberg 500 birdshead-style grip | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) method | Makerbot Cupcake #1460 from Batch #14, which began shipping in May 2010.[12] | Shockwave Technologies | Prototypes of the grip were 3D printed and tested by firing. Production grips are injection moulded in a glass-filled polymer.
|
The Cuomo Mag[15] | 2013-01January 2013[16] | Part:AR-15 rifle STANAG magazine[15] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) method[17] | Stratasys Dimension SST 3-D printer[18] | Defense Distributed[16] |
|
AR Lower V5[22] | 2013-03March 2013[22] | Part:AR-15 rifle lower receiver[22] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM)[23] | Stratasys Dimension SST 3-D printer[23] | Defense Distributed[22] | The receiver was able to handle enough stress to fire more than 600 rounds[22] |
Feinstein AK Mag[15][24][25] | 2013-03March 2013[15][24] | Part:AK-47 rifle magazine | Fused deposition modeling (FDM)[18] | Stratasys Dimension SST 3-D printer[18] | Defense Distributed[15][24] | It is a 30-round 7.62×39 AK-47 magazine[15] |
Liberator .380[1][2] | 2013-05May 2013[1][26][27] | Weapon:Pistol | Fused deposition modeling (FDM)[28] | Stratasys Dimension SST 3-D printer[29] | Defense Distributed[29] |
|
Red Rocketshotgun slug[30] | 2013-05May 2013[30] | Part: 12 gauge Mossberg 590 shotgun slug[30] | Solidoodle 3 3-D printer[31] | Jeef Hesszel[32] |
| |
Charon[33][34][35] | 2013-05May 2013[33] | Part:AR-15 rifle lower receiver[33][34][35] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) method[36] | LulzBot Taz[37] | WarFairy[34][35] | Charon V3 weighs 0.2 pounds and showed no signs of strain even after 96 rounds of 5.56 AR-15 ammo was fired.[36] |
WarFairy P-15[33] | 2013-05May 2013[33] | Part:Fabrique Nationale P90 stock[33] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) method[36] | LulzBot Taz[37] | WarFairy[34][35] | The stock works a lower receiver for the FN-P90 but would work with any standard AR.[37] |
3DX[38][39] muzzle brake | 2013-07July 2013[38] | Part: AR-15 rifle Muzzle brake[38] | Direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) method[38] | Sintercore[38] |
| |
NERO 556 Muzzle brake[41][42] | 2018[41] | Part: AR-15 Muzzle brake | Direct Metal Laser Sintering (DMLS) method[42] | Walker Defense Research[43][42] |
| |
Grizzly,[2][46] Grizzly 2.0 (.22-caliber rifle)[47] | 2013-08August 2013[46] | Weapon:.22 Long Rifle[2] | Stratasys Dimension 1200es[46] | 'Matthew' (pseudonym)[46][48] |
| |
Americas Cup sailor's knife[49][50] | 2013-08August 2013[49][50] | Weapon: Titanium Knife[49][50] | Selective laser melting method (using Titanium Powder processing)[49][50] | Unknown NZ$1.2 million printer.[49][50] | Rapid Advanced Manufacturing[49][50] | According to the New Zealand Herald: 'They threw it off a building on to asphalt from approximately 14m and they did that about 20 times, and then they threw it against a brick wall about 10 times and then they ran it over with a forklift 10 times. That was their acceptance testing and it survived, it didn't get broken'.[49][50] |
Reprringer[2][51][52][53] | 2013-09September 2013[51] | Weapon:Pepper-box .22-Caliber revolver[2][51] | Many plastic 3D printers[51] | Hexen[51][52] |
| |
5.56×45mm/.223 rifle suppressors:
| 2013-11November 2013[55] | Part: Titanium 5.56mm/.223 rifle suppressor and works for smaller rifles[54] | Selective laser melting method (using Titanium Powder processing)[50] | Unknown NZ$1.2 million printer.[55] | Oceania Defence Ltd.[50][55][56] and Rapid Advanced Manufacturing[57] |
|
7.62×51mm/.308 rifle suppressors:
| 2013-11November 2013[55] | Part: Titanium suppressor for 7.62mm rifles[58] | Selective laser melting using titanium powder[50] | Unknown NZ$1.2 million printer.[55] | Oceania Defence Ltd.[50][55][56] and Rapid Advanced Manufacturing[57] |
|
Small-caliber suppressors:
| 2013-11November 2013[55] | Part: 9mm and .45 ACP suppressor[59] | Selective laser melting using titanium powder[50] | Unknown NZ$1.2 million printer.[55] | Oceania Defence Ltd.[50][55][56] and Rapid Advanced Manufacturing[57] |
|
Solid Concepts 1911 DMLS[3][4] | 2013-11November 2013[3][4] | Weapon:Browning 1911 handgun[2][3][4] | Direct metal laser sintering (DMLS)[3][4] | EOSINT M270 Direct Metal 3D Printer[61] | Solid Concepts[2][3][4] |
|
The Israel drum magazine[62][63] | 2013-12December 2013[62][63] | Part:AR-15 rifle 75-round STANAGdrum magazine[62][63] | Many plastic 3D printers[62] | FOSSCAD members[62][63] | It is a 75-round drum magazine for .223 Remington/5.56 NATO AR-15 rifles. It can be installed into a Charon 3D-printed lower receiver.[62][63] | |
The Yee drum magazine[62][63] | 2013-12December 2013[62][63] | Part: AK-family (e.g. AK-47, AK-102, AK-104 and compatible variants) 75-round drum magazine[62][63] | FOSSCAD members[62][63] | 75-round drum magazine for 7.62×39mm AK-pattern rifles[62][63] | ||
Tornado multi-role aircraft spare and repair parts:
| 2014-01January 2014[64] | Part:Tornado parts[64] | Direct metal laser sintering (DMLS)[65] | BAE Systems[64] |
| |
Zig zag revolver[2][67] | 2014-05May 2014[67] | Weapon: .38 Caliber Revolver[2] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM)[2] | Unknown US$500 plastic 3D-printer used[67] | Yoshitomo Imura[67] |
|
Hanuman AR-15 Bullpup[68][69] | 2014-05May 2014[68][69] | Part:AR-15 rifle bullpup lower receiver[68][69] | Many plastic 3D-printers | WarFairy[68][69] |
| |
SKS grip and stock[53][70] | 2014-05May 2014[53] | Part:SKS rifle grip and stock[53] | Many plastic 3D-printers | FOSSCAD members[53] | ||
Škorpion vz. 61 grip and stock[53][70] | 2014-05May 2014[53] | Part:Škorpion vz. 61 sub machinegun grip and stock[53] | Many plastic 3D-printers[70] | FOSSCAD members[53] | ||
Improvised Explosive Device | 2014-06June 2014[71][72][73] | Weapon:Bomb[71][72][73] | Object24 3D-printer[71][72][73] | FBI[71][72][73] | The FBI is testing IED devices created using 3D printers to determine its feasibility and risk. They will also use it for training purposes. The FBI spokesman Ann Todd said: 'The 3D printer is cutting-edge technology that will be used by the Terrorist Explosive Device Analytical Center to enhance their capabilities in exploiting improvised explosive devices.'[71][72][73] | |
Rocket | 2014-07July 2014.[74] | Weapon: Rocket | Fused deposition modeling (FDM)[74] | University of Arizona[74] |
| |
Ruger Charger[75][76][77] | 2014-07July 2014[76] | Weapon:Ruger 10/22 semi-automatic pistol[76] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM)[78] | Unknown small format 3D printer[75] | 'Buck-o-Fama' (pseudonym)[76] |
|
Imura Revolver[79][80][81] | 2014-09September 2014[80] | Weapon: .38 Caliber Revolver[79][80] | FOSSCAD members: WarFairy, Frostbyte and others[81] |
| ||
Wounded soldier raptor[84] | 2014-09September 2014[84] | Other: Customisable Prosthetic hand including KA-BAR pistol Bayonet and flashlight mount[84] | Aaron Brown[84] |
| ||
Reason (M1911 pistol chambered in 10mm Auto)[85] | 2013-11October 2014 | Weapon:10mm Auto | Direct metal laser sintering (DMLS)[86] | EOSINT M280 Direct Metal 3D Printer[87] | Solid Concepts[87] |
|
CM901[88] | 2015-03March 2015 | Weapon: 7.62×51mm NATO | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Da Vinci 3D | Printed Firearm[89] |
|
Shuty V2[90] | 2015-05May 2015 | Weapon:9×19mm Parabellum | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Fusion3 F306 | Derwood | |
Washbear[91] | 2015-09September 2015 | Weapon:Pepper-box .22LR revolver | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | RepRap | James R. Patrick | |
XPR-1[92] | 2015-10October 2015 | Weapon: Plasma armature Railgun | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Kossel | David Wirth[93] |
|
Shuty MP-1[94] | 2016-01January 2016 | Weapon:9×19mm Parabellum[95] | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Fusion3 F306[95] | Derwood | |
Shuty WTF-9[96] | 2017-04April 2017 | Weapon:9×19mm Parabellum | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Fusion3 F306 | Derwood | |
Shuty AP-9[97] | 2017-04April 2017 | Weapon:9×19mm Parabellum | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Fusion3 F306 | Derwood | |
EMG-01A[98] | 2018-07July 2018 | Weapon:Coilgun | Fused deposition modeling (FDM) | Unknown 3D printer | Arcflash Labs |
|
3d Print Ar15 Lower
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ abcdGreenberg, Andy (May 5, 2013). 'Meet The 'Liberator': Test-Firing The World's First Fully 3D-Printed Gun'. Forbes. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
- ^ abcdefghijk5 Different 3D Printed Gun Models Have Been Fired Since May, 2013 – Here They Are, 3D Print, September 10, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdefgFirst metal 3D printed gun is capable of firing 50 shots, The Guardian, November 8, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghijkWorld’s First 3D Printed Metal Gun Successfully Fires 600+ Rounds, CNS News, November 13, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abSolid Concepts 3D-printed 1911 gets version 2.0, Guns.com, November 20, 2013. (archive)
- ^Ewer, Marty. 'Shockwave Technologies Raptor Grip Test Parts Molded and Approved!'.
- ^Ewer, Marty. 'The 14' 12-Gauge That Doesn't Require a Tax Stamp'.
- ^6, Dutchman. 'Bees Living in Their Heads'.
- ^Uncle, Say. 'Another NFA Hack'.
- ^Johnson, Steve. 'Grip Raptor Grip (Birdshead) Grip for Mossberg 500'.
- ^'Mossberg 500 Raptor Grip'.
- ^'Makerbot Lineage: Batch #14 - Ship Date May 2010'.
- ^'ATF Tech Branch letter to Mr. Len Savage'(PDF).
- ^Ewer, Marty. 'Raptor Grips are IN!!!'.
- ^ abcdefBranson, Michael (April 8, 2013). 'Defense Distributed Releases Printable AK Magazine'. The Firearm Blog. Archived from the original on September 19, 2014. Retrieved April 12, 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link). ()
- ^ abcGreenberg, Andy (January 14, 2013). 'Gunsmiths 3D-Print High Capacity Ammo Clips To Thwart Proposed Gun Laws'. Forbes Online. Archived from the original on September 8, 2014. Retrieved April 12, 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link) ()
- ^A Printed AR-15 Magazine, Ammoland.com, March 05 2013. (archive)
- ^ abc3D-Printed Gun's Blueprints Downloaded 100,000 Times In Two Days (With Some Help From Kim Dotcom), forbes.com, August 5, 2013. (archive)
- ^Franzen, Carl (February 7, 2013). 'Defense Distributed Unveils New 3D Printed Gun Magazine 'Cuomo' (video)'. Talking Points Memo. Retrieved April 12, 2013.
- ^ abBeckhusen, Robert (February 8, 2013). 'New 3-D Printed Rifle Magazine Lets You Fire Hundreds of Rounds'. Wired Danger Room. Retrieved April 12, 2013.
- ^3D-printed 30-round AR magazine brings us ever closer to a fully 3D-printed gun, Extreme Tech, January 14, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeBiggs, John (March 1, 2013). 'Defense Distributed Prints An AR-15 Receiver That Has Fired More Than 600 Rounds'. TechCrunch. Archived from the original on September 8, 2014. Retrieved April 12, 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link) ()
- ^ abPrinted AR Lower v5 Review, Defense Distributed official tumblr blog (archive)
- ^ abcIngersoll, Geoffrey (March 8, 2013). '3D Printing Company Names AK-47 Magazine After Gun Control Congresswoman'. Business Insider. Archived from the original on September 8, 2014. Retrieved April 12, 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link) ()
- ^Defense Distributed's 'Feinstein AK Magazine' Named After Gun Control Advocate Sen. Dianne Feinstein, Huffington Post, August 8, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abMorelle, Rebecca (May 6, 2013). 'Working gun made with 3D printer'. BBC News. Archived from the original on 8 September 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link) ()
- ^ abHutchinson, Lee. 'The first entirely 3D-printed handgun is here'. Ars Technica. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
- ^3D Printing Guns off the Download – Fact or Fiction?, inhale3d, May 7, 2013. (archive)
- ^ ab'Liberator' gun made with 3D printer fires first successful shot, CBS NEWS, May 6, 2013. '...Stratasys Dimension SST 3D printer' (archive)
- ^ abcIs this the first 3D-printed Bullet?, DailyMail, May 22, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcd3-D Printed Shotgun Slugs Blow Away Their Targets, Wired, May 22, 2013. (archive)
- ^3D-Printed Bullets Exist, And They're Terrifyingly Easy To Make, huffingtonpost, May 23, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdef3D-printed Hybrid AR-15/FN P90 Lower and 12 Gauge Slugs Make Web Debut, outdoorhub, May 22, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdSlowik, Max, Meet the Charon Family of 3D-Printable AR Lowers (Photos), 3 June 2013.
- ^ abcdSlowik, Max, '3D Printing Community Updates Liberator with Rifle, Pepperbox and Glock-Powered ‘Shuty-9′', 1 July 2013.
- ^ abcCharon V3, grabcad, September 3, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcIntroducing the WarFairy P-15 3D-Printed AR Stock, Guns.com, May 21, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdefSintercore creates first commercial 3D printed metallic firearm component, Gizmag, July 30, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdSintercore 3DX Muzzle Brake, thefirearmblog, August 26, 2014.(archive)
- ^Quick review of the Sintercore Auxetik 3D-printed Inconel brake (VIDEO), Guns.com, February 20, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcd'First Look: Walker Defense Research NERO Tactical Muzzle Brake'. Personal Defense World. 2018-12-06. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
- ^ abcd'NERO 556 | AR15 Muzzle Brake, 3D Printed Inconel'. Walker Defense Research LLC. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
- ^'Product Preview: Walker Defense Research NERO 556 Tactical Muzzle Brake'. www.americanrifleman.org. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
- ^'VIDEO: The Walker Defense NERO 556 Brake Rocks in Full-Auto'. Tactical Life Gun Magazine: Gun News and Gun Reviews. 2018-05-24. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
- ^'Walker Defense Research NERO 556 Muzzle Device -'. The Firearm Blog. 2018-05-21. Retrieved 2019-02-04.
- ^ abcdeFirst 3-D printed rifle fires bullet, then breaks, NBC News, July 26, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abc3D printed plastic rifle successfully fires 14 rounds - as gun advocates predict it will force changes in the law, DailyMail, 9 August 2013. (archive)
- ^ abWorld's first 3D-printed rifle gets update, fires 14 shots, The Verge, August 4, 2013.(archive)
- ^ abcdefg3D printer at cutting edge, New Zealand Herald, August 8, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghijklmnopNew Zealand leads the way in Titanium Additive Manufacturing, Metal Additive Manufacturing, May 12, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdefgIntroducing the 3D-printed Reprringer Pepperbox (VIDEO), guns.com, September 13, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abc3D Printed Pepperbox Pistol, firearmblog, October 8, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghijk3D printed guns a year on: from prototype to serious weapons, Wired, 16 May 2014. (archive)
- ^ abc556 SuppressorsArchived 2014-09-11 at the Wayback Machine, Oceania Defence. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghi'Hi-tech printers at home in Bay'. New Zealand Herald. 20 November 2013. Archived from the original on 9 September 2014.
- ^ abcSilencing the sound, Layer by layer Video, 3d Printing Systems. (archive)
- ^ abcTiDA Talk, Titanium Industry Development Association, July 2013. (archive)
- ^ abc762 SuppressorArchived 2014-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Oceania Defence. (archive)
- ^ abcde9mm Carbine LongArchived 2014-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Oceania Defence. (archive)
- ^ abcdUTU 9mm Titanium Pistol Suppressor with NeilsenArchived 2014-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Oceania Defence. (archive)
- ^Gun Review: Solid Concepts 1911 DMLS, Truth about guns, December 10, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghijk3D-printed 75-round drum mags: Meet the ‘Israel’ and the ‘Yee’ (Photos + Video), guns.com, December 23, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghijFOSSCAD Unveils 3D Printable 75 Round Drum Magazine for AR-15 Rifles, the truth about guns, December 22, 2013. (archive)
- ^ abcdef'3D-printed components flown in British fighter jet'. Yahoo! News. 5 January 2014. Archived from the original on 12 September 2014.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link) ()
- ^British tested fighter with 'printed' parts, 3D-Expo & Lenta.ru, September 6, 2014. Note: original article in russian, translation provided by 3d-expo.ru. (archive english) (archive russian)
- ^Stuart Miles (5 January 2014). 'Printing planes: BAE Systems now using 3D printed parts in fighter jets'. pocket-lint.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
- ^ abcdeJapanese Man Arrested For Printing His Own Revolvers, Tech Crunch, May 8, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeWarFairy’s 3D Printable AR-15 Bullpup, firearmblog, May 27, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeCheck out this 3D-printable bullpup for AR-pattern uppers, Guns.com, May 27, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcA Dark Side of 3D Printers: Printed Guns, natocouncil, August 30, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeThe FBI's Latest Tool To Fight Terrorism: A Stratasys 3-D Printer, the fool, June 28, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeFBI to Use 3D Printing for Bomb Research, 3D printer world, June 24, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeFBI Looking Into '3D-Printed Bomb' Threat, Sky News UK, 19 June 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdefUniversity of Arizona students successfully launch 3D printed rocket, 3ders, July 6, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcd3D Printed Semi-automatic Ruger Charger Pistol is Assembled and Fired – ‘If you take my gun, I’ll print another!’, 3Dprint, July 4, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcde3D-Printed Semiautomatic .22 Debuts. 'If you take my gun, I will simply print another one.', Reason, July 2014. (archive)
- ^3D Printed Ruger Style Pistol Demo by Buck O’ Fama ~ Video, Ammoland, July 4, 2014. (archive)
- ^3D Printing Lets Man Assemble Ruger Charger Pistol Without Legal Paperwork, Softpedia, July 8, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abNew 3D printed revolver dedicated to Yoshitomo Imura in development, 3Ders, Sep 24 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcDesigner Builds A 3D-Printable 'Imura Revolver' In Honor Of Arrested Japanese Maker, TechCrunch, Sep 24 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdeA New 3D Printable Gun, The ‘Imura Revolver’ is Being Designed, September 22, 2014. (archive)
- ^5 Alarming 3D Printed Guns, Versus, September 26, 2014. (archive)
- ^The Next Phase: 3D Printed Imura Revolver Hybrid Development, Truth about Guns, September 15, 2014. (archive)
- ^ abcdefghiWounded Soldier’ 3D Printed Prosthetic Hand – Giving Utility to Veterans & Active Adults for Under $100, 3D print, September 29, 2014. (archive)
- ^ ab'Solid Concepts 3D Prints Another Metal Gun, 'Reason', a 10mm Auto 1911'. 3DPrint.com. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
- ^ ab'Solid Concepts Announces Another 3D-Printed Metal Gun'. TechCrunch. AOL. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
- ^ ab'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 2014-11-01. Retrieved 2014-11-16.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
- ^Great, now 3D-printed rifles can fire larger, deadlier rounds
- ^‹See Tfd›(in Turkish)3D Yazıcıdan Üretilen Ölümcül Tüfek!
- ^3D Printed 9mm Semi-Auto! Shuty V2 Test-Fire!
- ^'PM522 Washbear 3D Printed .22 Revolver Concept'. September 5, 2015. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
- ^'3D printing used to make first real handheld railgun, which fires plasma projectiles at 560 mph'. October 19, 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- ^'Guy creates handheld railgun with a 3D-printer'. October 19, 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- ^The Shuty MP-1 is the Latest 3D Printed Working Semi-Automatic Handgun | 3DPrint.com
- ^ abShuty MP-1 3d-printed 9mm semiauto!
- ^3D Printed Shuty WTF-9 Experimental semi-auto 9mm
- ^3d Printed Shuty AP- 9 AR-15 9mm pistol
- ^Full-Auto 3D Printed Coilgun
- ^'You Can Now Buy a Practical Gauss Gun'. July 12, 2018. Retrieved March 6, 2019.