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Making Your Own Gun
Jeremy Bentham is on the Case: Does Anybody Still Use Zip Guns in Harm City?
© 2016 James LaFond
OCT/29/16
James, does anybody still use zip guns in Harm City?
Lately Gunwatch has featured a number of articles on homemade guns being used by criminals in other countries, particularly Brazil, Australia and Canada. They range from crude zip guns to well crafted submachineguns (SMG) equipped with silencers.
It got me to wondering if any of the urban youth gangs in America still employ homemade guns on occasion. Given that they were once as much a feature of urban youth gang rumbles as switchblade knives, brass knuckles, chains and car antenna whips . Of course since at least the 1980’s the youth gangs have been awash in cash from the sale of crack and as such have had no problem affording the store-bought stuff. The Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA 68) was in part intended to disarm street criminals by outlawing the manufacture or importation for interstate sale of a certain class of small to medium caliber, concealable handgun dubbed the “Saturday night special” ( a satirical play on the Colt brand names “Police Special” and “Detective Special”). They were generally characterized by frames made of an inexpensive and easy to cast zinc alloy. These frames lacked durability, but then the SNS was intended to be carried much, displayed as a warning when the occasion demanded it and actually fired very little. As the passing years have demonstrated the GCA 68 accomplished little more than improve the quality of firearms in the hands of the gang bangers. Now we have handguns made with plastic polymer frames that are stronger than steel (like the Glock). Nearly all the firearms in the illegal market today are either stolen or obtained through illegal “strawman” purchases from a gun store. Federally licensed gun dealers are under intense scrutiny by the government, so a licensed gun dealer doing business “off the books” these days is so rare as to be remarkable. Here in the Midwest both state and federal prosecutors in the metro areas have, in their own words, admitted they are reluctant to pursue strawman purchase cases because they involve an exceptional amount of paper work to prove AND they just end up jailing “a lot of black people” (look up the Great White Defendant Syndrome). The blacks who get convicted will typically be the pathetic “idiot” relatives of a gang-banger who were duped or pressured into making the gun purchase for the banger. So typically the only time a prosecutor will be motivated to pursue a strawman purchase case is if a cop was shot with the straw purchased gun.
-Jeremy Bentham
Jeremy,
I have not heard of a zipgun used in the Baltimore area in 20 years. Excuse me, but “we be fo real niggas up in here, cracka!”
Thanks so much for this and the other work you’re doing, Jeremy.
Home made guns are turning up quite bit in Australia now: (Deadly D.I.Y: Homemade guns hit Sydney streets in record numbers)
A homemade 9mm pistol made out of easy-to-buy items.
THEY’RE known as “junk guns”, deadly firearms made from a jumble of copper pipes, bike parts, old power tools, and held together by cable ties.
Record numbers of homemade guns made from materials easily sourced at local hardware stores are hitting the streets, with teenage boys in the city’s southwest and outlaw bikie gangs the prime market.
The weapons are made using instructions found ¬online and include so-called pen and slam guns that use pipes to replicate a shotgun.
They account for about 10 per cent of all firearms being seized by police.
Firearms Squad commander Mick Plotecki said some pen guns sold for as ¬little as $100 and were often as dangerous to the user as they were to other people.
“Most of them are very unsafe weapons, they can blow up in your hand,” he said.
“They are only single-shot pen pistols but one shot is enough. One shot can kill somebody.
“They’re easily concealable and people that make them sell them for relatively small prices.
“Good criminals have the connections to get existing guns but on the lower end, those guns aren’t available so they move to the next thing. We’re seeing it as a growing trend.
“We seem to be seeing it more than we have previously. It does seem to be younger males going for these pen guns, a lot of them in south-western Sydney.
“They seem to be very popular with outlaw motorcycle gang members and also some of the customers are younger males who buy them for various reasons which we can’t explain.
“That’s a concern that they can source guns in the first place, and the fact that people make them and sell them.”
Mr Plotecki said that while there was no evidence the homemade guns had been used by local extremists, it was a concern for the future.
“There is no evidence of that but the community should be aware of them,” he said.
University of South ¬Australia senior lecturer Kesten Green, who specialises in gun control, said criminals making their own guns made “economic sense” because it was cheaper than importing them.
“If they can’t obtain them legally it is much cheaper (to make them) than importing them,” Dr Green said.
“I would imagine the cost of making them would be relatively low.”
(West Australia Police Seize Homemade Machine Guns in Perth -2013)
Check out the homemade Aussie SMG in this video! Outwardly the weapon’s profile resembles the Danish Madsen SMG. It appears to function as well as the factory produced stuff.
Here’s a story on the case of a Sydney jeweler who manufactured homemade copies of the MAC-10 SMG, equipped with silencers, to sell to “bikie” gangs. He manufactured 100 guns at 15K per copy. That comes to 1.5 million Oz Bucks total (1,140,000 in USD). Not a bad chunk of change for a couple years work, eh? Superbly made copies too.
(Jeweler Angelos Koots admits to making sub-machine guns at his Seven Hills home and supplying them to bikie groups)
Homemade MAC-10s and 11s are turning up in Canada as well.
(Homemade Canadian Submachine Guns and Silencers)
(Home built MAC-11 type submachine gun seized in Alberta Canada
FYI: there is a quite a bit of gang warfare in the major cities of Western Canada. Various organized crime groups, both native born and immigrant, are engaging in turf wars to gain increased market share in the lucrative drug trade. Edmonton, Alberta in particular is recognized as the “Detroit” of Canada.
A couple of years ago the headless corpse of a victim of this gang warfare was dumped in an alley in Edmonton: (Decapitated murder victim ID'd: reports)
Vancouver, B.C. has seen much gang warfare in the 21st Century:
The Vancouver suburb of Surrey even had its own version of the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre not too long ago. The Surrey Six Murders:
Firearms experts predicted this trend in homemade firearms manufacture some 50 years ago, back at the beginning of the Leftist push for gun control legislation. They predicted that any future underground gun market would likely focus on producing submachineguns for the criminal element rather than police style revolvers and bolt-action hunting rifles. Contrary to popular belief second and third generation submachineguns such as the British STEN, the American “Grease-gun” and the MAC-10 have ridiculously simple mechanisms that enable them to be manufactured and assembled with simple machinery. Plus the SMG is an intimidating weapon with considerable firepower and increased hit probability over handguns. Just the ticket for urban gang wars or fighting off the police. Models like the MAC-10 and 11 SMGs are very compact and thus easy to conceal under a coat or in a gym bag or a woman’s handbag. The advent of inexpensive and simple to operate computerized manufacturing technology like CNC machine tools and 3-D printing makes it even more likely that illegal gun manufacturers will be able to produce compact full-automatic weapons in quantity in the near future.
(MAC-10 Submachinegun)
(Homemade Brazilian Submachineguns)
P.S. Strictly speaking you can legally make your own gun in the USA, provided you aren’t making it for sale and provided you are not prohibited from possessing firearms because of a felony conviction or a court order, etc. It also most not be full-automatic, a sawed off shotgun (barrel length of less than 18 inches and overall length of less than 26 inches), a short barreled rifle (under 16 inch barrel length), silencer equipped or a military style semi-automatic rifle or shotgun assembled from imported parts. Muzzleloaders are of course exempt from most restrictions. Keep in mind that states vary considerably in their gun laws. For example, what’s legal to posses in Pennsylvania could get you thrown in prison just across the Delaware River in New Jersey:
Also the ATF has reputation for making up its rules as it goes along. “Therefore be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves.”- Matthew 10:16 (NIV)
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B     Oct 29, 2016

Guns are generally designed to be easy to manufacture even using non-computerized processes, which is why Pashtuns up in the mountains of Pakistan are banging out serviceable AK-47s (and before that were making Enfields.)

The barrel requires specialized steel and production processes or it gets worn out very quickly, but that's not really a big problem for most of these users.

weaponsman.com/?p=19960
PR     Oct 29, 2016

This is probably my favorite topic. Jeremy, your search terms are "Professor Parabellum", "Practical Scrap Metal Firearms," and "PA Luty"

CNC mills and lathes are not necessary for SMG or autoloading pistol manufacture. Nor are mills and lathes. Everything can be built with a drill press, a hack saw, and a stick welder. There are milling attachments for a drill press, if you have to. On YouTube, there are a bunch of videos of guys who built the autoloading pistol in "Practical Scrap Metal Firearms."
Sam J.     Oct 30, 2016

It's completely impossible for them to stop the manufacture of weapons. A new company is making a low cost metal printer. These currently cost $1,000,000 but they're going to vastly lower the cost at least to 10% and I bet lower. The current ones are used by jet engine makers for aircraft engine parts. SpaceX and NASA actually use these things to make rocket engine parts. The parts are exceptionally strong.

MatterFab Reveals Their Affordable Metal 3D Printer, 'An Order of Magnitude Cheaper'

3dprint.com/9592/matterfab-reveals-their-affordable-metal-3d-printer-an-order-of-magnitude-cheaper

OK that's still a $100,000 but wait, there's even a DIY open source version that can be made for $1,200. Hell the dindus could make that in a day slinging crack.

livescience.com/41646-3d-metal-printer-affordable-parts.html

It may be a little crude but in 2 or 5 years time the sophisticated version will come down in price to the $1,200 DIY version or close.
WellRead Ed     Oct 30, 2016

Dindus don't use Zip Guns because, to build one requires a basic understanding of science, physics and tool, use. Since the average Dindu's expertise covers only rampant reproduction and recreational pharmaceutical sales and distribution, coupled with the fact that they drop out of school at 14 years old, the likelihood that they will produce any technological products at all is nearly zero. Any that DID manage to produce such an item would be looked upon as having supernatural powers.
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