justino6969
Justino6969
justino6969

Nope, worked in a few warehouses in my life. UPS and FedEx do the same thing with ground shipments.

Steel plate, no penetration. It was in the video.

Lrn 2 Capitalize.

Lrn 2 grammr

(.4647 mpg for lazy 'Muricans like me)

A person could still manufacture a plastic firearm for a specific purpose rather than murder. It could be for a competition, for profit, for fun, for experience in 3D printing, or a vast majority of other purposes.

Went swimming with my Razr V3m in my pocket for about an hour.

Pretty easy. I stopped at level 9.

I just got a RAZR M I bought off of eBay in the mail today. Before that I was using my HTC Thunderbolt, so about 3 years?

Ah, you finally said something that makes sense! It IS possible that the designers wanted to make polymer firearms for more than only two specific reasons.

I've personally only seen polymer receivers, but thanks for the heads up!

It doesn't matter what your name is or what happened in your life. You still can't generalize the entire human race into one opinion, stating that "They make it with the intention of either blind curiosity or violence towards others." Besides, only a Sith deals in absolutes.

Someone already posted this, but I'll tell you too. The only printed parts in this video/documentary are the receiver and magazine. Everything else is metal (barrel, trigger assembly, bolt, springs, hammer, etc.). So this actually is one of the first fully printed rifles.

Actually, it is one of the first. The documentary you are talking about shows a 3d printed receiver and magazine. Still a metal barrel, trigger assembly, hammer, bolt, springs, etc. The receivers in AR platforms are almost always plastic anyway.

Because you know everyone in the world's intentions. You're either a troll, or have a terrible outlook on life. Either way, I feel sorry for you.

Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill!

I bought a Lenovo y410p about 2 weeks ago and it kicks ass. Would definitely recommend at that price for a powerful machine in a decently small package.

Holy crap I want his white car.

Agreed. I live right by the Midwest Auto Group dealership in Dublin, Ohio, and the employee of the month gets to take home a 458 Italia everyday for the month.

I've been thinking about this a lot lately. I'm a senior at Ohio State and will hopefully in a couple years have a nice paying job, when I can then get a car I really want to baby. In the meantime, I have a 2001 Jetta 1.8T Wolfsburg. What I've been thinking, is that when I can afford it, I will buy a new car. Then, I