On today’s episode of Uncanny Valley, we discuss how WIRED was able to legally 3D-print the same gun allegedly used by Luigi Mangione, and where US law stands on the technology.

  • @seathru@lemmy.sdf.org
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    127 days ago

    You 3D print something with no serial and it’s untraceable.

    Except for all the metal parts they used a debit card/paypal to buy.

    • @magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      27 days ago

      The only regulated parts (I know of) are:

      • receiver (considered the actual gun, this is the bit they print)

      • suppressors (not printable but you can make these homemade, though not as good and definitely not as reliable.)

      • autosears (or anything else that makes your gun fully automatic, or even act like it, usually these are super basic and printable)

      • big magazines (not federal but a lot of states have laws on em’ Usually states with these laws will allow big ones to be sold with rivets, so they can usually be converted with a drill and new spring. Also they’re just boxes w/ springs so you can print one.)

      They’re also starting to Anodize rifling into barrels using cheap 3D printed jigs, so some of the metal parts are now getting homemade too.

    • @joel_feila@lemmy.world
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      026 days ago

      Those would hard to teace and yu can pay cash. How many stores sell metal pipe withthe same inner diameter as a 45 caliber. It would be lole tracing meth lab by ammonia sales.

      • @ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        125 days ago

        Depends. He used a printed glock, not an FGC2.0. The FGC uses parts like you describe but printed glocks just take glock parts.

        That said, it’s still fairly trivial to acquire those glock parts anonymously.