Yeah, using the wrong kind of filament accidentally is understandable and doesn’t say anything about anyone’s intelligence.
Takes a real moron to test fire a brand new experimental gun in their hand, and then cry about it and blame their friend when it inevitably goes sideways
Using the wrong filament isn’t Darwin Award worthy. Test firing a newly manufactured weapon with your hand is. And that would be true even if this wasn’t an experimental home-made design…
You test fired a 3D printed gun you had no hand in making
I mean, I think that that’s reasonable. But that seems like a “get behind something protective and pull the trigger with a string” territory. Regardless of who printed it.
If there isn’t some kind of standard safety checklist for printed weapons, I really think that there should be if lots of people are going to be printing these things.
You test fired a 3D printed gun you had no hand in making… but your friend is the idiot? 🤔
Yeah, using the wrong kind of filament accidentally is understandable and doesn’t say anything about anyone’s intelligence.
Takes a real moron to test fire a brand new experimental gun in their hand, and then cry about it and blame their friend when it inevitably goes sideways
Wrong filament and I bet 30% infill too! ;)
nah, it felt heavy enough to be at least 100% infill, this is the reason there are no plastic fragments in my hand
I meant it as in at least it was 100% infill not as in it was 100%++ infill
100% infill leaves no room for overflow/swell. Anything more than that is going to cause issues too.
I think you misrepresent something here, I clearly told my friend which filament to use and trusted them, that’s why it’s mildly infuriating
And in your opinion, how would I have better represented someone test firing a gun in their own goddamn hand?
Wait, you’re right. After your reply I think “moron” was way too lenient of me.
Please tell me you weren’t wearing eye or ear protection, that’d make this even better.
ofc I weren’t! eye/ear protection is for soy boys!
Using the wrong filament isn’t Darwin Award worthy. Test firing a newly manufactured weapon with your hand is. And that would be true even if this wasn’t an experimental home-made design…
I mean, I think that that’s reasonable. But that seems like a “get behind something protective and pull the trigger with a string” territory. Regardless of who printed it.
If there isn’t some kind of standard safety checklist for printed weapons, I really think that there should be if lots of people are going to be printing these things.
ok, I’ll admit I’m kinda at fault here to