Not recommending people do it, but I survived just fine.
Not recommending people do it, but I survived just fine.
How do I unsee this?
I suppose technically you could but it would be a hell of a lot of work and you’d need detailed drawings.
The 3d model already has all of the geometry and hole locations required from the manufacturer.
If you know your printer well, all you do is download the model, slice it and press play.
You don’t print the explody bits; you have to purchase things like the barrel and the trigger assembly.
However, I know an engineer at Sig Sauer who printed his own gun and he’s never fired it while holding it…so, still prone to eventual catastrophic failure ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I didn’t mention it in my comment but you assume a lot of risk in a private party sale. We aren’t talking about illegal guns but ones that have been registered at some point in time if they aren’t historical.
If you want to sell a gun, you should go through an FFL to avoid liability.
What is this straw man fallacy you’re seeing? I haven’t made any arguments; I’m simply stating facts about how legal gun purchases work in the United States.
All retailers are required to have a Federal Fire Arms license and background checks are required for all purchases made through an FFL. That means all gun show purchases made through an FFL as well.
The “gun show loophole” is a political myth used by politicians on the left to describe a legal purchase through a private sale, which may or may not happen out in the parking lot of some gun show. But not through a licensed vendor.
I’d say just watch Star Trek: Enterprise and call it good.
How many perimeters did you use?
I found this Reddit post after a Google search.
I think you went too much on the stain from the get go. I’m finding I have to be patient between coats on all my PLA prints.
What type of stain did you use? I imagine it makes a difference considering the part is plastic.
Possibly true, however, I used a rather simple trick I call the Bill Clinton method.
I didn’t inhale.