No. It's still soft plastic. "Conductive" here means it conducts electricity, and there's no use for that in conventional guns. In theory, you could make custom bullets with electric ignition (instead of percussion caps) and replace the firing mechanism with a battery and a switch.
The carbon fibers are what makes it conductive, but the material is still mostly plastic. In order for the fibers to reinforce the construction, they need to be weaved in such a way so that they reinforce the stress lines, and they have to be taut. In that plastic, however, they are all over the place, and the way spool-fed 3D printers work, they would be jumbled up even further. You wouldn't have the "carbon fiber" effect.And it's probably not as soft as you think.. ..it's made of carbon fiber
There are carbon fiber guns out there, but you can't print them (yet). The manufacture process is different. And the barrel interior is still metal. Even "real" carbon fiber has problems with that kind of heat and stress. But if you're making a one-shot it might work.if someone finds a way to reinforce/cure this fiber, then maybe it could work ..who knows ...at least, this is as far as I can came up of a not-metallic/3d printable gun![]()

True, you could probably even mass-produce thousands of guns, all with identical rifling.Oh the implications are even greater than that. Assuming that it has proper rifling in the barrel, it can probably be shot with reasonable accuracy within a certain range. If the rifling can be created by a 3D printer, what would stop someone from creating a barrel that would recreate ballistic fingerprints of another?
Assuming that there is rifling and that the 3D printing methods leave fewer imperfections in the process, this might be EXACTLY what happens. Kinda scary.True, you could probably even mass-produce thousands of guns, all with identical rifling.

Well, looking at the picture of itAssuming that there is rifling and that the 3D printing methods leave fewer imperfections in the process, this might be EXACTLY what happens. Kinda scary.

Not having enough resolution in the printing process. The printing is also a physical process, so it's going to have the same sort of imperfections and slight differences that other manufacturing processes create.If the rifling can be created by a 3D printer, what would stop someone from creating a barrel that would recreate ballistic fingerprints of another?
Yeah, generally some form of plastic or synthetic pellets of varying grain. Back during the first homemade ones, people used sugar just to show the proof of concept.Anyway, this whole 3D printing is pretty awesome. Of course, you would need some kind of material to print stuff..?
I think you mean striation, but yeah, I hear what you're saying. Given the fact that it's plastic, accuracy should drop exponentially as danger increases exponentially as well. You wouldn't catch me firing one of these a third time or fourth time (second, maybe.)It looks like it had interchangeable barrels. This may be because they only have a limited number of uses each with the heat from the gun deforming it. Instead of identical rifling it might actually end up with a different rifling on each shot or, worse, no marks at all on the bullet.
Well yeah, and cost of course. But let's say in a few years.... I've already seen a rich nut pay for a trip into outer space in my lifetime; I wouldn't be surprised if I see a similar display of wealth by a tycoon with a hard-on for JFK memorabilia paying for a rifle that can create the same exact striation patterns as that of Oswald's.Not having enough resolution in the printing process. The printing is also a physical process, so it's going to have the same sort of imperfections and slight differences that other manufacturing processes create.
