Anonymous
(ID: r5rls+JN)
9/11/2025, 5:17:35 PM
No.515520033
>>515518305
>Literally if you have a simple lathe you can built a rifle in an afternoon and a half.
t. only drilled holes in 80% lowers
lmao, if you're a heavily experienced machinist and have um.. a lathe and a mill? those two requirements aren't easy to come by
>The biggest obstacle is modern ammo.
I'll cut you some slack, you're not as delusional as other mutts who claim their rednecks can outproduce government factories with a simple farm shop
>ban ammo casings
whatcha gonna do now? it's the reality in brazil. they have to resort to cutting off crimps off nailgun blanks to make .22 ammo. (easily circumvented by poisoning the nailgun blank supply and forcing the manufacturers to make them misifre as shown by Russia, I know this because I live here and tried to extract the priming compound out of locally sourced primers from soviet union and china)
if you have fired casings you have the ammo. priming compounds can be had at home, you just need stibnite and potassium chlorate (ww1 compound, trust me on the fact that it works because I tried it. never did more than primed casings since its illegal but it snaps successfully, no misfires.). gunpowder can be had with black powder or sourcing it from nailgun blanks. but ammo casings are the real issue. in brazil, it's illegal to take casings from shooting ranges. possession of an ammo casing is illegal. to make an ammo casing from scratch you need both the casing and the primer, while primers can be had with relatively simple (not so really) metal stamping (useless if you have fired ammo, fired ammo also has fired primers).
>>515518869
>basic machinery
good luck
please report back to me when you build a lathe
who said lathes can't regulated wink-wink? ;)
I'm not saying it's not possible, it will take a year or something
>>515519737
ok
>>515519462
my nigga the gun isn't the issue, ammo is. if you want to have a self-loading/repeating gun you need conventional ammo. you can't manufacture the casings at home.
>Literally if you have a simple lathe you can built a rifle in an afternoon and a half.
t. only drilled holes in 80% lowers
lmao, if you're a heavily experienced machinist and have um.. a lathe and a mill? those two requirements aren't easy to come by
>The biggest obstacle is modern ammo.
I'll cut you some slack, you're not as delusional as other mutts who claim their rednecks can outproduce government factories with a simple farm shop
>ban ammo casings
whatcha gonna do now? it's the reality in brazil. they have to resort to cutting off crimps off nailgun blanks to make .22 ammo. (easily circumvented by poisoning the nailgun blank supply and forcing the manufacturers to make them misifre as shown by Russia, I know this because I live here and tried to extract the priming compound out of locally sourced primers from soviet union and china)
if you have fired casings you have the ammo. priming compounds can be had at home, you just need stibnite and potassium chlorate (ww1 compound, trust me on the fact that it works because I tried it. never did more than primed casings since its illegal but it snaps successfully, no misfires.). gunpowder can be had with black powder or sourcing it from nailgun blanks. but ammo casings are the real issue. in brazil, it's illegal to take casings from shooting ranges. possession of an ammo casing is illegal. to make an ammo casing from scratch you need both the casing and the primer, while primers can be had with relatively simple (not so really) metal stamping (useless if you have fired ammo, fired ammo also has fired primers).
>>515518869
>basic machinery
good luck
please report back to me when you build a lathe
who said lathes can't regulated wink-wink? ;)
I'm not saying it's not possible, it will take a year or something
>>515519737
ok
>>515519462
my nigga the gun isn't the issue, ammo is. if you want to have a self-loading/repeating gun you need conventional ammo. you can't manufacture the casings at home.