51²č¹Ż

A licence to print: how real is the risk posed by 3D printed guns?

A licence to print: how real is the risk posed by 3D printed guns?

Thomas Birtchnell, 51²č¹Ż

are back after Queensland Police reported last week that they had discovered a 3D printer in a raid on what appeared to be a ā€œlarge-scaleā€ weapons production facility as a part of .

According to , the raid uncovered homemade weapons and ammunition in a workshop manufacturing facility ā€œcontaining equipment used in the production of fully automatic machine guns, including a 3D printer, lathes, drill presses and other toolsā€.

The Gold Coast Bulletin that Detective Superintendent Jon Wacker, of the Drug and Serious Crime Group, said the ā€œUziā€-style guns, thought to be made with the help of a 3D printer, were ā€œfairly closeā€ to factory quality.

One of the weapons seized in the Operation Oscar Quantum raids. Queensland police

One of the home made weapons was captioned in as being a ā€œ3D-printed submachine gunā€. This could certainly raise alarm and hint at a new era of disorganised and decentralised weapons production, and a burgeoning ā€œreshoringā€ of weapon manufacturing as an alternative to importation from overseas.

But the fact is that 3D printing technology is not yet at the stage where it can readily produce weapons. Although it can be used to help rogue gunsmiths work their shady trade.

Impracticalities

The fact is that todayā€™s home or consumer grade 3D printers are not able to produce durable metal objects, such as would be required to print a gun. The standard nozzles used in the process of fused deposition modelling () simply do not get hot enough to melt pure metals.

There are certainly efforts to bring metal FDM 3D printers to market. One of the future contenders for mass adoption is a prototype , much like a home welder. At the moment this does not really compare to the resolution of plastic printers, although the concept is claimed to be at least .

However, there is constant innovation with 3D printer materials. There are currently to make metal-infused filaments in bronze and copper. These are certainly a promising development for budding home jewellery designers and makers, but not gunsmiths, as firearms require stronger and purer metal feedstocks.

One of the key hurdles for gunsmiths is the extremely high temperatures needed to melt or metals. For example, iron sinters at between 1,100ā„ƒ and 1,300ā„ƒ, whereas a general FDM 3D printer can reach 195-220ā„ƒ.

Another hurdle is the cost of ā€œpowderisedā€ metals found in direct metal laser sintering () or selective laser sintering () printers.

Powdered metals also require to use them: finely divided metal powders, such as titanium and aluminium, can spontaneously combust causing fires.

It is possible to see limited runs of critical metal parts for automobiles and other specialist objects made on 3D printers in many and industry facilities.

Indeed, for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) around the world, ā€œadditive manufacturingā€ using 3D printers is a . Many SMEs are investing in their own high end metal 3D printers or utilising facilities in universities and incubators.

But one catch is the cost. For example, the is a relatively ā€œentry levelā€ DMLS 3D printer and costs between US$100,000 and US$250,000. Such machines are unlikely to turn up in the Christmas stockings of criminal gangs.

The EOS EOSINT M 100 can print using metal, but itā€™s not cheap. EOS

Prototypes

What makes me sceptical that the guns recovered from Operation Oscar Quantum were 3D printed in their entirety is not only the prohibitive cost of 3D printing in metals, but the presence of typical gunsmith production machines at the facility.

But a 3D printer could have certainly been used to manufacture many non- or near- critical parts, such as grips or the outer framework.

A 3D printer may have also been used for ā€œrapid prototypingā€ for mock-ups to test the final design in plastic. This is where a 3D printer can quickly produce a prototype part for testing before the final part is produced using more conventional means. This is one of the most common uses of 3D printers in industry today.

It should be noted that this is not the first time that police have flagged 3D printing as playing a role in weapons production.

On December 10, 2015, Queensland Police that Taskforce Maxima found methamphetamine and steroids, drug paraphernalia and ā€œa loaded handgun allegedly created by a 3D printerā€ in a raid on a meth lab.

The handgun from Taskforce Maxima certainly appears to be made on a 3D printer, featuring the characteristic surface ribbing you see from 3D printed items. It also appears to conform to the design parameters of a , the ā€œLiberatorā€, produced by American organisation, Defense Distributed.

The ā€˜Liberatorā€™ recovered by Queensland police in December 2015. Queensland Police

However, the critical part ā€“ the barrel ā€“ appears to be a conventional non-printed piece, most likely metal. Whether it would have actually worked safely or simply been used for intimidation is another question entirely.

NSW Police Commissioner Andrew Scipioneā€™s team was also to have bought a 3D printer for A$1,700 and made a polymer Liberator handgun from a design file downloaded from the internet.

Backyard gunsmiths

We shouldnā€™t really be surprised that 3D printers are now an integral part of illicit gunsmithsā€™ repertoires. 3D printing is a near essential element of any pre-production suite, particularly for rapid prototyping. Metal 3D printing will no doubt be a part of the suite too, if it is not already.

Gunsmithing also has a long heritage in Australia as the photo below shows. Indeed, history dates back to 1912.

The flintlock maker, Lithgow, NSW. Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Jeff Carter exhibition

3D printing also offers tremendous advantages and perhaps even a . Other local industries could benefit from 3D printing boutique, custom and novelty objects. This would buck the trend of that has ailed Australian manufacturing over the 21st century.

And we should remember that itā€™s not only 3D printing that enables people to build illicit firearms. With the right tools, a skilled gunsmith can make a weapon in their back shed. However, 3D printing can make that process easier and more accessible to less skilled individuals.

The Conversation

, Senior lecturer,

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