Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The FGC-9 MKII Stingray. Due to the open-source nature of the FGC-9, there have been many packages released that alter the configuration, caliber, ergonomics, and other legally-restrictive qualities of the base-model firearm. These are all available through a wide variety of channels, all with different levels of testing, and allow the end user ...
9×19mm Parabellum: First 3D printed frame to be successfully tested with 1000+ rounds full auto in one sitting without failure. [61] [62] 3011 / 3011DS [63] 2021, November; 2023, January (DS) Receiver: 1911 based PDW FDM Deterrence Dispensed .45 ACP, 9×19mm Parabellum, .22 TCM: Utilizes a 1911 slide for the upper, and an AR-15 fire control group.
In October 2020, Jacob Duygu, a Kurdish German gun designer known by the pseudonym "JStark1809" released the FGC-9, which became the world's most popular printed gun. [13] A second model was later made in April 2021, and both could be made in a matter of weeks with less than $500 in tools and materials. [14]
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Deterrence Dispensed is best known for developing and releasing the FGC-9, a 3D-printed carbine requiring no regulated parts. [11] At the peak of its popularity, the group also distributed blueprints for AR-15s, an AKM receiver called the "Plastikov", handgun frames, and a magazine for Glock pistols named after New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez, who once pushed for crackdowns on the online ...
Mk. 6 helmet: United Kingdom: British Armed Forces. [44] being replaced by the Mk. 7 helmet: Mk. 7 helmet: United Kingdom: British Armed Forces: MUKUT: India: Indian Armed Forces: Advanced Combat Helmet(ACH) type Kevlar helmet made by MKU. MICH TC-2000: United States: special operations – United States Army
The Advanced Combat Helmet (ACH) is the United States Army's current combat helmet, used since the early 2000s. It was developed by the United States Army Soldier Systems Center , [ 2 ] the U.S. Army Special Operations Command , [ 3 ] and the U.S. Army Research Laboratory [ 4 ] to be the next generation of protective combat helmets for use by ...
U.S. Army's 25th Infantry Division soldiers wearing the IHPS during the 2019–20 attack on the U.S. embassy in Baghdad.. The IHPS helmet began development as a replacement for the Advanced Combat Helmets and Enhanced Combat Helmets in 2013 [2] under the U.S. Army's Soldier Protection System program, which is intended to improve soldier protection and performance while reducing weight of a ...