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    Print your own working hand-gun

    WASHINGTON, USA: Computer files to create a hand-gun almost entirely from parts made with a 3D printer were published online on Monday (6 May), alarming gun control advocates after it was successfully test-fired by its inventor.
    Image: Wiki Images. The Liberator FP-45 on which the Wiki Project hand-gun is based.
    Image: Wiki Images. The Liberator FP-45 on which the Wiki Project hand-gun is based.

    The single-shot .380-calibre Liberator bears a vague resemblance to its namesake, the FP-45 Liberator pistol that the United States developed during World War II. The guns were air-dropped to French Resistance fighters during the war.

    Computer-aided design (CAD) files for the Liberator appeared on the Wiki Project website of Defense Distributed, a non-profit group that promotes the open-source development of firearms using 3D printers.

    "We'll build the trigger first. Next, we'll build the hammer sub-assembly and drop the hammer into the frame...," reads the accompanying set of instructions, which come in English and Chinese.

    "Finally slide the grip onto the frame and insert the grip pin. Your Liberator is now ready to go!. . ." concludes the instructions.

    For the Liberator to conform with US firearms laws, the instructions call for an inch-big chunk of steel to be sealed with epoxy glue in front of the trigger guard, so that the weapon can be spotted by metal detectors.

    The only other non-plastic part is a tiny nail that acts as the firing pin.

    Video of hand-gun being fired

    Business magazine Forbes posted a video of the Liberator being remotely test-fired outside Austin, Texas last week, with a yellow string tied to the trigger of the toy-like white-and-blue handgun. Watch video Liberator

    "The verdict: it worked," Forbes reported, adding however that the Liberator exploded ("sending shards of white ABS plastic flying into the weeds") when its inventor Cody Wilson attempted a second test using a rifle cartridge.

    "I feel no sense of achievement," the 25-year-old University of Texas law student told Forbes. "There's a lot of work still to be done."

    CAD files for gun parts have been available on the Internet for some time but the Liberator is apparently the first entire weapon ever fabricated almost exclusively with parts created with 3D printing technology.

    Supporters of tougher gun laws in the United States expressed their alarm. There are currently nearly as many guns in the US as there are people (300m guns to 315m people). There are also more than 30,000 gun-related deaths every year.

    "Stomach-churning," was how Senator Charles Schumer of New York described the new gun.

    "Now anyone,a terrorist, someone who is mentally ill, a spousal abuser, a felon, can essentially open a gun factory in their garage. It must be stopped," he said.

    In the House of Representatives, Congressman Steve Israel, also from New York, is sponsoring an Undetectable Firearms Modernisation Act to outlaw plastic homemade guns.

    "Security checkpoints, background checks and gun regulations will do little good if criminals can print plastic firearms at home and bring those firearms through metal detectors with no-one the wiser," he said in a statement.

    No longer prohibitively expensive, 3D printers can be bought for about the same price as a top-end laptop computer. Brooklyn-based MakerBot, for instance, markets its desktop Replicator 2 for US$2,199 promising delivery in a week.

    After the December 2012 massacre of 20 children at Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, MakerBot took down CAD files for semi-automatic rifle parts that gun enthusiasts had posted on its open-source 3D printing library.

    Source: AFP via I-Net Bridge

    Source: I-Net Bridge

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