User Panel
Posted: 6/15/2024 11:06:27 AM EDT
Has anyone tried doing this. I've seen some discussion of the topic but never seen anyone who's actually done it. With advancements in technology, are they printing uppers/lowers strong enough to be used in anything other than a .22?
I'm curious because if you can, I may invest in a printer and appropriate material and start making my own. |
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[#1]
I would say that unless you are seriously looking to get into 3D printing, and have other 3D projects in mind, printed AR receivers and printed pistols are not durable, and are not worth the time/expense/effort.
I would look into a small CNC machine for 80% aluminum receivers. |
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[#2]
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Can't never could 'til try came along.
"All welchers should be removed from the EE".-Aimless R.I.P. to the EE |
[#3]
Originally Posted By M4BlackRifle: I would say that unless you are seriously looking to get into 3D printing, and have other 3D projects in mind, printed AR receivers and printed pistols are not durable, and are not worth the time/expense/effort. I would look into a small CNC machine for 80% aluminum receivers. View Quote I tend to agree. From what I have gathered 3D printers are limited somewhat in the materials they can work with. I won't trust a proper poly lower that was molded/milled from proper stock. Get a Ghost Gunner or similar unit and make something that will last. |
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[Last Edit: bionicmonkey]
[#4]
Have made shit tons of 3d printed guns and there is a certain value to being able to come up with a thought and make it real - like the mac n cheese (not my design but a great example) - why not have a mac 11 upper an AR FCG and glock mags.. voila.. but a printed gun while novel is never as strong as a molded frame or a metal frame.
For AR's the best path is a mini mill and 80% or ghost gunner cnc. The buffer tower is an inherently weak area of the design, which can be overcome by a 1 piece frame and stock vs a milspec conforming frame. For glock pistols a 5 layer design 3d printed can be pretty good -ive got frames with 400+ rounds... but 3d printing is its own rabbit hole.. |
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[#5]
Uppers? The idea scares me unless it's .22LR.
Lowers? This might be better, or 3D print a beefed up receiver designed to be made of plastic and cast a mold from that. |
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I think the hardest thing for good LE working for good agencies to really absorb is that there are whole departments full of exactly the complete fuckheads we rail against here. - vectorsc
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[#6]
You all seem to be assuming plastic.
You know you can 3-D print aluminum. |
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[#7]
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[#8]
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[Last Edit: lysanderxiii]
[#9]
Originally Posted By s4s4u: OP appears to asking about plastic, or there wouldn't be a concern. CNC is a 3-D printer. Just costs a lot more View Quote When one says "3-D printing", one is talking about additive manufacturing, not subtractive manufacturing (aka machining). 3D Printing ALUMINUM FAST! EOS at Formnext 2023! 3D Printed Aluminum Intake Manifold - Laser Melting Process |
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[#10]
Originally Posted By lysanderxiii: When one says "3-D printing", one is talking about additive manufacturing, not subtractive manufacturing (aka machining). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoCPu0hjOiM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUp3oCGZOzk View Quote Cool tech. But, is it practical? I mean practical for dudes like me who aren't "manufacturers"? |
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[#11]
Originally Posted By s4s4u: Cool tech. But, is it practical? I mean practical for dudes like me who aren't "manufacturers"? View Quote If not today, shortly. |
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[#12]
From a cost, practicality, and durability viewpoint, it is a pointless endeavor in my opinion. Interesting, but pointless. I can knock out an 80% lower in a couple hours on a manual Bridgeport.
I guy I know just bought a Genmitsu CNC Router Machine PROVerXL 4030 V2 that should do the job. I also don't own plastic AR magazines. |
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[#13]
3d printing with metals can be expensive. A used CNC mill is probably less than most metal printers.
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[#14]
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[#15]
Look on reddit. I couldn't tell you even what the sub is, but that's where you're going to find this stuff as far as I know
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[Last Edit: bionicmonkey]
[#16]
Originally Posted By D_Man: There are some designs that are overbuilt to address durability concerns, and seem to hold up fairly well. One would be the Hoffman Orca: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/157876/orca1-3242678.png View Quote Would disagree. Orca is probably the best 3d printed (polymer) design but it is still limited severely by that fact. It is still not even close to comparable to a milled frame gun with a ultra cheap commercial upper. For example the system will melt after too many shots rapid fire and that lets the barrel droop and eventually causes malfunctions and total failure. If there was a tier system where Daniel defense went in tier 1 then there would be normal tier and then budget tier like anderson and then these would go below that in shit tier. No disrespect to hoffman - he is doing the lord's work but the limits of plastic are real. 3d printing metal is super expensive .22 3d printing sure.. For battle rifles. Milling is the answer. |
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[#17]
Originally Posted By bionicmonkey: Would disagree. Orca is probably the best 3d printed (polymer) design but it is still limited severely by that fact. It is still not even close to comparable to a milled frame gun with a ultra cheap commercial upper. If there was a tier system where Daniel defense went in tier 1 then there would be normal tier and then budget tier like anderson and then these would go below that in shit tier. No disrespect to hoffman - he is doing the lord's work but the limits of plastic are real. View Quote My statement of being "overbuilt" was in comparison to taking the size and shape of a standard mispec receiver set and simply translating that design 1:1 to a 3D printed plastic. |
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[#18]
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[#19]
Originally Posted By IowaFox: Originally Posted By lysanderxiii: You all seem to be assuming plastic. You know you can 3-D print aluminum. And titanium. ...but at costs that make just buying a Daniel Defense the much cheaper option. |
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[#20]
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I know you can feel it let it in people will still hate you in the end.
So hate back, plan the attack then they will realize they cannot crack the mind of a fucking maniac. The voice inside you always wins your grave's been dug so lie in it. |
[Last Edit: kychas]
[#21]
3D printing a carbon fiber left side and right form for a AR15 lower that can be put together like an Calvary arms lower
The left/ right side form could be clam shelled so the CF is put in there wet and it is closed and clamped to create a perfect inside and outside with even markings so just fill with paint, pins so the CF would have holes so drilling would eliminated Then epoxy the sides together and it is done I never had a cavlery arms lower but I have heard good stuff about them. So I believe a CF version would be stronger than plastic |
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[#22]
Originally Posted By kychas: 3D printing a carbon fiber left side and right form for a AR15 lower that can be put together like an Calvary arms lower The left/ right side form could be clam shelled so the CF is put in there wet and it is closed and clamped to create a perfect inside and outside with even markings so just fill with paint, pins so the CF would have holes so drilling would eliminated Then epoxy the sides together and it is done I never had a cavlery arms lower but I have heard good stuff about them. So I believe a CF version would be stronger than plastic View Quote Sounds neat. Have you ever done any of those things? |
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[#23]
I have a 3D printer and I printed a magazine clamp using PETG filament (with 100% infill). The first time I dropped the magazines, the clamp broke quite easily. It could be argued that I may have to tweak my settings so I get better adhesion from layer to layer, but I'm not confident at all in plastic filaments when it comes to building firearms. There are lots of videos showing 3D printed firearms fly apart. I suspect people do it just out of curiosity and to stimulate other's curiosity so that the technology will become improved.
I've printed trigger guards which appear to be plenty tough, but I still prefer a real trigger guard. I've printed some index clips and ladder rails, but they suck in comparison to the real thing. |
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[#24]
I can understand printing LOTS of lowers with 10% infill, 0.1mm walls. Especially if you live in a city/county/state that likes buy backs. I figure to get $100 per lower that cost about $8.00 to print. Win/Win for everyone!
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[#25]
Originally Posted By VinceU1: I can understand printing LOTS of lowers with 10% infill, 0.1mm walls. Especially if you live in a city/county/state that likes buy backs. I figure to get $100 per lower that cost about $8.00 to print. Win/Win for everyone! View Quote Man, I miss the PD buy backs. |
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Can't never could 'til try came along.
"All welchers should be removed from the EE".-Aimless R.I.P. to the EE |
[#26]
Originally Posted By M4BlackRifle: From a cost, practicality, and durability viewpoint, it is a pointless endeavor in my opinion. Interesting, but pointless. I can knock out an 80% lower in a couple hours on a manual Bridgeport. I guy I know just bought a Genmitsu CNC Router Machine PROVerXL 4030 V2 that should do the job. I also don't own plastic AR magazines. View Quote A couple of hours? Doesn’t take an hour on my manual Bridgeport. |
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"A mass production economy can neither be created nor sustained
without a leveled population, one conditioned to mass habits, mass tastes, mass enthusiasms, predictable mass behaviors." John Gatto |
[#27]
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[#28]
Originally Posted By VinceU1: I can understand printing LOTS of lowers with 10% infill, 0.1mm walls. Especially if you live in a city/county/state that likes buy backs. I figure to get $100 per lower that cost about $8.00 to print. Win/Win for everyone! View Quote Last time I saw a buyback advertised the PD was paying for "complete" firearms. It might be faster to assemble a slam fire shotgun and affix the barrel to a 2x4 with a hose clamp than to print a lower. |
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[#29]
I have a few mills and a few printers. While very different, I enjoy both aspects of the builds. That said, other than a few odd scenarios, making your own is not the cheaper, and typically not the better option regardless of methods. We do it for the process, not the result.
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A firearm is like a parachute, if you need one but don't have one, you'll probably never need one again. IG @jimstagramguns
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[#30]
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Carpe diem - Seize the day
Carpe per diem - Seize the expense check |
[#31]
3dp lowers? Very much been done before, OP sounds like you know about them
3dp uppers for more than rimfire? Been done before; Hoffman's Orca, FOSSCAD's 'Animal Farm' for .308, and some AWCY? projects come to mind as prominent examples... Hybrid 3dp uppers? Also been done before...check out a former firearms engineer's take on ATI's hybrid polymer upper but for .308...use a printed or crudely cut-out tube-style insert for the upper to hold the barrel and nut, and a clamshell-style polymer piece that clasps to the tube to make a very capable and lightweight upper... in the 2020s, literally anything is possible when it comes to this stuff... |
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[#32]
Originally Posted By D_Man: There are some designs that are overbuilt to address durability concerns, and seem to hold up fairly well. One would be the Hoffman Orca: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/157876/orca1-3242678.png View Quote Reminds me of something Beretta/Benelli would make. |
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