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Thread: **Homemade weapons**

  1. #121

    Easy, basic homemade shotgun

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/30453017/H...-Homemade-Ammo

    How many homemade gun books have you read, only to discover that to make the thing work you needed a metal lathe or a milling machine? This book covers it all: legalities, concepts of ballistics, a basic 12 gauge shotgun design from pipe, simple gunpowder recipes, primer material, reloading and much more - including designs for a homemade double barrel, a muzzleloader, pipe sizes for other calibers, and more! This is one book that really delivers what it promises. Even if you have no intention of ever building a firearm, the information in this book is an insurance policy. No matter where you may live in the world or under what regime, the knowledge represented in this book offers you a chance to cope. It offers hope, not in nice wishes and goodwill, but in tangible fact and step-by-step illustrated instructions. For information purposes only…..
    Starts with a basic primer on guns, then it shows you how to make a simple 12 gauge single barrel shotgun, a double barreled version, alternate caliber versions and a muzzleloader (which does not require shells, just gunpowder and rocks to stick down the barrel). Also shows how to do basic reloading (refilling) of shotgun shells, and how to make gunpowder and refill the primers.

    A gun like this, while not pretty, could put food on the table and prevent you from starving in a survival situation, and although its usefulness in combat would be marginal at best, it could serve to get you a better weapon.

    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-15-2012 at 11:01 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul




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  3. #122

    How to Bury a Gun & Ammo (and have it still work when you dig it up)

    http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles2/wood115.html

    Downloadable .pdf version:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/13087631/H...a-Gun-and-Ammo

    The method above was used to bury a semiautomatic rifle with ammo for 15 years, and when the owner dug it up it was still in perfect condition.

    Last edited by Expatriate; 09-03-2009 at 07:51 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  4. #123

    Two improvised weapons and warfare books:

    Ragnar's Big Book Of Homemade Weapons
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/16169095/B...memade-Weapons






    David's Tool Kit: a Citizen's Guide to Taking Out Big Brother's Heavy Weapons
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/7162290/Da...-Heavy-Weapons
    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-15-2012 at 11:02 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  5. #124
    Homemade .30 carbine on display in the NRA National Firearms Museum:

    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-16-2009 at 07:19 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  6. #125

    Make a working "AK-47" pistol in 24 hours - no machine shop required

    This is a pretty interesting read. The first part sounds like they're trying to sell you something, but the ebook is free and included in the document so I guess they're just trying to sell you on the idea. Supposedly, if you follow the directions, you can make a semi or fully-automatic weapon in 24 hours of labor using nothing more than a hacksaw and drill, some scrap sheet metal and tubing. It also helps if you have an AK47 trigger set, hammer and grip, as well as magazines and a barrel in the preferred caliber (can be bought on the internet since they're not considered weapons), but at the end of the book they show you how to make those items from scratch if you can't buy them. The weapon itself is chambered in either .22LR, 7.62x25 Tokarev, or 9mm. It could probably be adapted to any other pistol round.

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/15655467/24HRAK47

    Also, this is the original forum post that contained this design, the ebook refines the directions and adds more info on making parts:
    http://www.weaponeer.net/forum/forum...683&PN=3&TPN=1

    Of course, it's only legal to build the semi-auto version in US states that allow it, and if you're not in the US it's probably not legal to build a gun unless you work for the government. So in that case the book is for educational purposes only.



    In this video the builder is using rubber bands for the recoil spring because he didn't have a suitable spring at the time.


    .22 version using 10/22 magazines:
    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-15-2012 at 11:03 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  7. #126

    Philip Luty's submachine guns update

    In case people reading this thread were wondering why so many of the pics and downloads in the earlier part of this thread disappeared, Philip Luty, (a courageous Brit who came up with the best and easiest to make homemade machine gun designs) was abducted by the British Thought Police and had his website (www.thehomegunsmith.com) erased because he published information they didn't like. Nobody knows where he is since apparently under new terrorism laws his government doesn't have to tell anyone. Read about it in this thread: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?t=197887

    I think I found alternative sources for all his downloads since others were wise enough to save backups:
    You might want to download the files in case Scribd deletes them, as they have been known to do with similar information.

    Volume I: Simple 9mm Submachine Gun: http://www.scribd.com/doc/6454642/Ex...chine-Gun-luty
    (You can still buy this book on Amazon if you want a hard copy) - http://www.amazon.com/Expedient-Home.../dp/0873649834

    Volume II: Simple .32 or .380 caliber Submachine Gun: http://www.scribd.com/doc/6454766/Ex...Vol-II-PA-Luty

    9mm Submachine Gun made from British Standard pipe fittings: http://www.scribd.com/doc/6118520/ex...-bsp-9mm-smg-p

    These ones are from a cache of his old website:

    Square tubing design for 9mm Submachinegun: http://web.archive.org/web/200702262...mmPistol.shtml

    Improved .32 or .380 Submachine Gun MkII: http://web.archive.org/web/200610171...80Pistol.shtml

    No machine tools are required to make his original two machine gun designs, that's the beauty of them. Here's one someone made using only a hand drill and a hacksaw:
    http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showpos...8&postcount=88

    Luty's designs have only three moving parts besides the mag and ammo; the bolt, trigger, and sear. You could probably build any of them in a few days of work for less than the cost of a pair of shoes. All are of straight blowback design and fire from an open bolt, meaning that the firing pin is a part of the bolt face. When the trigger is pulled the spring-loaded bolt slams forward, chambering a round and firing it, then is blown back by the recoiling empty shell. The empty shell casing strikes the ejector and flies out of the ejection port cut in the side of the gun, then the bolt slams forward again, picking up another round from the magazine and repeating the process until the trigger is released or the gun runs out of ammo.


    Overview of the process of construction for the .32/.380 model:
    Home Made Machine Gun - Video

    Luty also wrote guides on how to make your own improvised ammo if you couldn't buy it:

    Homemade .32, .380, or .38 Special Ammunition: http://www.scribd.com/doc/13116830/E...t-Handgun-Ammo

    Homemade 12 gauge and .410 Shotgun Shells: http://www.scribd.com/doc/13116907/E...e-Shotgun-Ammo

    (In countries where blank cartridges for replica guns or starter's pistols are not available, nail-gun blanks could be used as primers instead with some modification of the basic idea. The procedure could be used to make many more types of cartridges than the examples given.)

    Philip Luty has been charged with "incitement of crimes" because he made this info available. No such thing as free speech in Britain anymore, I suppose. However in America there is absolutely nothing illegal about possessing this information unless you actually build the gun, at which point you will have violated 18 U.S.C. 922(o), the "Gun Owner's Protection Act" (1) and the National Firearms Act which, remember now, shall not be infringed .

    In the US there is no way to legally build these guns that I know of. You could modify the designs to fire from a closed bolt as a semi-automatic (one shot per trigger pull) with a hammer disconnect, and then they would be legal, but this would also have the effect of greatly increasing the complexity of the gun and making it harder for the average Joe to build.

    I'l try to find and restore the original pics eventually. Meanwhile, I guess you might want to pray for Phil if you believe that helps. If anyone discovers anything about what they have done with him please inform us. He has cancer so they'd better be taking good care of him.
    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-15-2012 at 11:03 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  8. #127

    Gunpowder (Black Powder) and Tracer Bullets

    How to Make Tracer Bullets:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/3614244/fi...racers-N-Stuff





    Black Powder is required for muzzleloaders, and can even be used to reload your modern cased ammo, although it isn't as powerful as modern gunpowders and your gun will require cleaning after a handful of shots. Still, it's better than nothing and can easily be made at home. Plus, it can be used for making cheap solid-fuel rockets, which is a very enjoyable hobby.
    http://www.dangerouslaboratories.org/foxfire5.html
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/14561359/H...e-Black-Powder
    http://www.musketeer.ch/blackpowder/homemade_bp.html
    If you don't know where to get the ingredients:
    Potassium Nitrate, if you don't want to make it from piss can be obtained as "Stump Remover" from lawn and garden centers.
    Sulfur is not absolutely required for black powder, but it decreases the ignition temperature enough for it to work reliably in flintlock guns. Guns using primers or caps supposedly can use sulfurless powder just fine. It is a fungicide and pesticide, and is often used for cropdusting. You might be able to get it at a farm supply center or a drug store, but otherwise it can be ordered from a chemical supply company, since it is generally unrestricted.
    Charcoal is available as, well, charcoal. It has to be powdered though.

    Once you have mixed up your black powder, you will want to grind it finely to make it perform well. Use a ball mill containing lead musket balls or balls of any other heavy non-sparking material. Ball mills aren't hard to make, just use a capped piece of PVC pipe or something with a lid, fill it about an eighth of the way with balls and jury-rig a motor to roll it slowly on it's side for a day or two. Here's an example of a well-made homebrew design:
    http://www.brianredmond.net/pyro/mill.html

    Once it is properly ground, you can corn (granulate) it by wetting it and pushing it through a sieve to increase its quality still further. Advantages of corning are as follows:
    (from Wikipedia) Around the late 14th century, European powdermakers began adding liquid to the constituents of gunpowder to reduce dust and with it the risk of explosion. The powdermakers would then shape the resulting paste of moistened gunpowder—known as mill cake—into "corns," or granules, to dry. Not only did "corned" powder keep better because of its reduced surface area, gunners also found that it was more powerful and easier to load into guns. The main advantage of corning is that the flame spreads between the granules, lighting them all, before significant gas expansion has occurred (when the gunpowder explodes). Without corning much of the powder away from the initial flame would be blown out of the barrel before it burnt. The size of the granules was different for different types of gun. Prior to corning, gunpowder would gradually demix into its constitutive components and was too unreliable for effective use in guns.
    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-15-2012 at 10:57 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  9. #128

    Legal Semi-Automatic version of Luty's submachine gun design

    For those of you who would like to build one of Philip Luty's submachine guns legally, I found a document he released on Scribd that outlines the changes required to make his 9mm BSP submachine gun design into a legal semi-automatic.

    This is the original, illegal full-auto design:
    9mm Submachine Gun made from British Standard pipe fittings: http://www.scribd.com/doc/6118520/ex...-bsp-9mm-smg-p
    This is what you'd have to do to it in order to make it legal:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/14423834/BSP-Semi-Auto

    Note that this would increase the amount of moving parts from 3 to 7, add some fiddly little springs, and the end result would be a gun with reduced performance. Still, that's what you have to do to comply with federal gun laws in America. The alternative is a hefty jail sentence if you get caught with the original, simple version of the gun.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul




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  11. #129

    Homemade Submachine Gun Confiscated in Canadian Drug Raid

    Looks similar to Luty's designs, but I suppose you could say that for any simple open-bolt SMG. The police say it's very "troubling". I sure hope Canada doesn't go the way of Britain and ban gun schematics because of this. They already banned "defaming of identifiable groups" so it wouldn't be a stretch.

    http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2...ubmachine-gun/

    A submachine-gun seized during a gang house raid in Winnipeg's North End last week is unlike anything a police firearms expert has seen locally before.

    What makes the gun so unique -- and troubling, police say -- is the way it was cobbled together.

    Winnipeg Police Service spokesman Jason Michalyshen displays a weapon seized in the ammunitions raid of a Winnipeg home at a Jan. 12, 2009 press conference. The weapons included one item believed to be a homemade machine gun. (C. Procaylo/SUN MEDIA)



    Duttchen said the gun will be sent to a lab in Ottawa for examination as part of an investigation into its origin.

    Police showed the firearms to reporters yesterday, along with an assortment of drugs and a 9-mm handgun seized during a separate bust Saturday afternoon in the 800-block of McCalman Avenue.

    "We've got a significant amount of firepower here," Michalyshen said.

    Two of the more unusual items were hollowed-out books used to hide about $9,000 in cash, police said.

    Officers also seized 31.5 ounces of cocaine, 17 ounces of marijuana, eight Percocet tablets, two grams of hashish oil and 3.2 ounces of the cutting agent benzocaine.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  12. #130

    Homemade pistols confiscated in India

    “Among the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look upon the Act depriving a whole nation of arms, as the blackest.”
    — Mahatma Gandhi

    The British Empire's prohibitive gun laws are still around today in India.

    I guess it's only the law-abiding people who were deprived though - looks like the criminals are manufacturing everything they need with ease, if they don't get it from corrupt officials at the state-owned military and police arms factories.

    http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2...rices-to-rise/

    The Election-Gun-Buying-Mania does not appear to be purely an American phenomenon. The black market in India have seen prices for guns double since before the general election. The arms dealers claim the spike in demand is attributed to the various political factions arming themselves.
    Raiganj, April 23: An arms selling racket is active in North Dinajpur, thanks to political parties which want to be well-equipped before the elections and are acquiring weapons through criminals who are on their payroll.
    This looks well made for a homemade gun. Clearly the maker had access to a milling machine and a decent knowledge of firearms. There must be underground arms factories in India nowadays. Looks patterned after a Beretta 1934 or a similar pistol.






    #
    Matt Groomon 05 May 2009 at 8:24 am link comment

    Thanks for the info, Mehul. I think the image of the pistol is profound because it shows just how advanced the production of illicit arms really is. That’s a nice piece, and probably rivals some guns available for sale here in the US. It’s even chorme plated. It’s bumper chrome, but still that’s impressive. The grips are even nicely done, meaning that there is a certain level of artisanship and competition that goes into the manufacture of illegal guns. There’s no chance of stopping people from owning guns, ever. It will never happen. It doesn’t even work in countries where they were never allowed to civilians to begin with, and I think that’s great!

    I’ve always said that if gun prohibition came to America, it would unleash waves of suppressed, selective fire SMGs and real Assault Rifles the likes of which haunt the Anti-Gunners nightmares, and they would literally be for sale on every street corner in America. Why would people buy these things? Because they already own most everything else! Why would you have a Bolt Action .22 when you could have a select fire SMG if the price and penalties for possession were the same? With the SMG, you’d more than likely be able to reload the ammo, too. If you’re gonna be a Bear, be a Grizzly.
    Last edited by Expatriate; 07-15-2009 at 02:32 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  13. #131

    Minuteman .45ACP submachinegun plans

    This SMG is an older design, and obviously much harder to make than the Luty submachineguns on the previous page. It requires a milling machine and a lathe. Also, the article says that the plans have to be modified somewhat for the design to work properly.

    It does include an extractor though, unlike the Luty designs, which means it would be much quicker to make the weapon ready again in the event of a dud round. (Lutys rely purely on the power of the recoiling case to extract it from the chamber, so if a round failed to go off you would have to pull the bolt back and put your fingers into the ejection port to remove it). However, I think it would be much easier to add an extractor to a Luty than build the Minuteman design from scratch, if you absolutely had to use poor quality or homemade ammo that was likely to contain duds.

    Here's the plans, must be printed out and taped together since the pages are cut in half:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/6338854/minuteman-smg-plans

    Article describing construction and some design changes (must download to read properly):
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/16108379/M...-SMG-cal-45ACP

    To download use this account, or make your own.
    username: random4570
    password: random4570

    Last edited by Expatriate; 07-26-2009 at 04:46 AM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  14. #132

    Reloading primers with matchheads

    Well, say you want to reload your empty shell cases, but you live somewhere where you can't just go out and buy primers, gunpowder and bullets. You can cast your own bullets out of fishing weights or any other source of lead, and you can make black powder or use crushed standard match heads for gunpowder. But most people don't realize that you can use STRIKE-ANYWHERE matches to refill your old primers, so you don't always have to buy new ones.

    Army manual (TM 31-210) section about this:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...e-primer.shtml

    Also how to reload a cartridge using improvised materials:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...artridge.shtml

    Here's a couple of videos describing how to reload primers:

    YouTube - Making Primers Part 1
    YouTube - Making Primers Part 2
    Last edited by Expatriate; 07-15-2009 at 12:35 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  15. #133

    Cordless Drill Powered Machine Gun from Finland

    Shoots 420 rounds per minute and is belt-fed. The 80-year-old builder got caught and the gun was confiscated by police.




    Not a blowback… it’s pretty easy to see it’s a cam-driven system, the big drum there probably runs the bolt back and forth, and honestly with a .22 rimfire you could probably just have it crush the rim as it comes to the top of the travel, or trip a sear with another little projection/indentation on the drum.

    I’ve thought of building such a thing for a long time, except hand-cranked so as to be legal.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  16. #134

    Borz Machine Pistol - Chechnya

    The Borz (Wolf) is not a specific model of gun. It is the name given to any of the many similar small homemade submachineguns found in the hands of Chechen rebels. It is similar to the Luty SMGs posted earlier in that it is fabricated from whatever materials are available, and usually has an unrifled tube for a barrel. However that doesn't matter much at the short ranges it is intended for. Normally it is used to kill a few Russians quickly in a surprise attack, in order to take their superior firearms.
    http://www.securityarms.com/20010315.../3000/3061.htm









    Chechnya’s Homemade Weapons Fuel War
    Russian

    Rebels are using improvised and home-made weapons to continue their guerrilla war.

    By Umalt Dudayev in Grozny (CRS No. 227, 15-Apr-04)

    On a chilly day at the beginning of April a short young man wearing a black jacket, jeans and knitted cap pulled right down to his eyes walked briskly through Grozny’s central market. He went up to two Russian officers who were buying cigarettes and beer at a small mud-spattered kiosk.

    The young man suddenly pulled out a short-barrelled gun from under his jacket and opened fire on the unsuspecting Russians. Then he dropped his own gun next to the dead bodies and quickly pulled the gun of one officer out from its holster, grabbed a submachine gun lying next to the other and disappeared into a nearby side-street.

    When Russian and Chechen security officials arrived at the scene some time later, no one could describe for them what the killer looked like. The only evidence they found was the abandoned Chechen-made Borz – or Wolf – submachine gun.

    The Chechen-manufactured Borz is one of a number of weapons, made, reconfigured or repaired in Chechnya, which enable enemies of the Russian military and the pro-Moscow Chechen police force to continue their fight at very low cost. The net result is that even if the Russian authorities were to manage to stop the theft of weapons, or their trade and sale to the rebels, a substantial arsenal will remain in their hands.

    The 9-mm submachine gun Borz is an ideal weapon for sudden attacks. It is a small compact gun, whose lightness and ease of use makes up for its poor technical quality.

    “This submachine gun has quite poor tactical and technical features,” said Major Anatoly Medvedev, an officer for the Russian intelligence service, the FSB, in Chechnya. “The 9-mm bullets from the Makarov pistol, which the Borz uses, are too powerful for the steel from which the gun’s barrel is made and wear it out quickly. After shooting two or three cartridges, a Borz simply begins to ‘spit’ the bullets out.

    “Nonetheless, I would describe this gun as ideal for saboteurs and killers. It has entirely fulfilled its purpose as a weapon used by paramilitary groups of a partisan type. It has a fantastic rate of fire, and once all the bullets have been fired it can simply be thrown away. As far as I know, a Borz costs very little in Chechnya, about 100 US dollars, and its production requires little effort or expense.”

    The Borz gun was first produced in 1992 in Grozny’s Krasny Molot factory by the order of the first Chechen president. General Jokhar Dudayev, who personally received the first manufactured weapon bearing the number, 0001. Industrial production of the gun soon stopped due to the lack of good-quality metal and the outbreak of war in 1994. But the homemade manufacture of these weapons has continued up until recently.

    Vladimir Semchenko, head of the science department at Moscow’s Central Army Forces Museum of Russia, told IWPR that the main military museum of the country has several Chechen Borz submachine guns in its collection, “One of them was given to our museum as a gift by General Gennady Troshev [who formerly commanded Russian troops in Chechnya]. The exemplars of this gun that we have differ from one another both in their technical features and in appearance, which indicates that they were homemade.”

    Adlan Musayev, who used to work at the Krasny Molot factory, said that “only several hundred” Borz guns were produced there but it had spawned many more copies.

    Homemade weapons have helped Chechen rebels fight on, particularly in the second conflict that began in 1999. The fighters do not have heavy weaponry but are extremely skilful at fashioning whatever comes to hand into battle arms.

    Their guerrilla warfare relies heavily on mines and explosives. Lacking conventional mines, they use unexploded mines and rockets. Sometimes they simply surround the rockets with explosive and blow them up. Often they heat the unexploded weapons over fire and obtain liquid explosive, which they pour into containers, to which they then add metal bolts, nuts and nails to create shrapnel.

    The Russian high command, and especially its main spokesman Ilya Shabalkin, has frequently said that its soldiers have found medical syringes at captured militant bases and used this as proof that many fighters are drug addicts. However, it appears that most of these syringes are being used as detonators for mines. De-miners can detect metal objects but do not pick up the presence of plastic syringes.

    The guerrillas are also skilled at reusing captured weaponry. Major Medvedev said they had found a heavy machine gun in a militant base in Vedeno in southern Chechnya which had been removed from the turret of an armoured vehicle. “Even those officers who had served in many conflict zones were amazed at what they saw,” he said.

    “The fighters put it on a rotating tripod, fixed bicycle handlebars to it, and connected the mechanism of electric trigger to an ordinary battery. As a result they turned it into a very powerful, compact and convenient gun, which is as good as factory-made ones. As the saying in Russia goes, ‘Necessity is the mother of invention’!”

    Twenty-three-year-old Iznaur, who fought in the platoon of the famous Chechen commander Hamzat Gelayev, whose death was recently confirmed, reveals another source of weaponry.

    “Turning a drive shaft from a KAMAZ truck into a mortar doesn’t take much effort,” he said. “You just need to solder a medium-sized nail to one end of the shaft, and your mortar is ready! All that’s left is to stick it into the ground and you can start shooting. We had several such mortars in our platoon.”

    Attempts by pro-independence president Aslan Maskhadov to produce arms in the inter-war period of 1996-9 also created a stock of weaponry that is still being used. Weapons were produced mainly in Grozny at some of the workshops of the half-destroyed Krasnyi Molot and Elektropribor factories and in the third largest city in Chechnya, Argun. The Argun factory mainly produced mortars and grenade launchers.

    An FSB officer in Chechnya, who wished to remain anonymous said, “According to our information, before they invaded Dagestan in the summer of 1999, the units of Shamil Basayev and the Arab fighter Khattab received over 250 such mortars and about a thousand auxiliary grenade launchers, which had been manufactured in Argun. Also, in Grozny, Makarov pistols were being made on a territory of a former tram depot. Components were purchased at military factories in Russia.”

    Even today in Chechnya one can buy Makarov pistols, refashioned from gas pistols for between 100 and 150 dollars. Makeovers that have an “Ossetian” barrel from North Ossetia are the most popular with the buyers. They are just one part of an arsenal of weaponry that is fuelling the continuing violence in Chechnya.

    Umalt Dudayev is a pseudonym of an independent Chechen journalist.
    The BORZ ("Wolf") machine-pistol (due to its dimensions, that's more likely assimilable to a large pistol cabable of selective fire than to a real sub-machinegun or machine-carbine) is clandestinely produced in metal workshops of Chechnya to equip "Self-Defence Forces", partisans and separatist-terrorist formations. The weapon is based on the PPS (Sudaev) WW2-era machine-carbine, and it is a blowback-operated gun. Lock is provided by a return spring.
    The barrel is securely fastened to the bolt. With the forward movement, the bolt extracts the cartridge from the magazine and chambers it. The weapon fires from the open bolt, and the bullet is ignited by striking pin. The pressure of solid-reactant gases on the bottom of case retards the blow-back at the moment of the shot, and such principle (the retarded blow-back) made it possible to decrease the mass of the bolt and the recoil.

    The receiver group is made of stampet sheet steel. The magazine well and the grip are connected to it by spot welding (or sometimes by screws). The bolt is fixed by screws. The very simple sights are all in one with the receiver group. The cocking handle is top-mounted; the BORZ machine-pistol sometimes features a small up-folding stock to help controlling the weapon while full-automatic firing.
    The magazine construction is borrowed from the World War 2 - time German "Schmeisser" MP-40.
    A second generation machinepistol-submachinegun, called BORZ-20, has been recently spotted in Chechenya; according to the sources the BORZ-20 is a clone of the Israeli MICRO-UZI, firing from the closed-bolt position and having an higher capacity magazine (40 rounds) that's housed in the grip; a sound suppressor might apparently be attached to this BORZ-20.

    Pros of the project: the weapon is compact enough, and the availability of low-capacity magazines allows to carry the weapon concealed and ready to fire. The safe - fire selector switch is placed a position that makes possible to switch the safety off and select semi-auto or full-auto fire while still holding the weapon from the grip, and keeping the finger at the trigger's reach; and, since the cocking handle is placed upside, that can be cocked ambidextrously. Also, the grip of this weapon is reported to be fairly ergonomic, and the elongated magazine well can be hold as a foregrip to allow better control of the weapon in full-autofire. The fore part of the bolt has been engineered with a protrudescence to work as a spent cases deflector, so that such an item is not required as a separate part.

    Cons of the project: the offensive capabilities of this weapon in actual combat situations is modest due to its weak cartridge and of the general low quality in manufacture of most existing BORZ machine-pistols (which are for the most part made in clandestinely-made in backyard workshops). The weapon is largely inaccurate in full-autofire, and its short aiming line further decreases the accuracy. Bolt, barrel and sights tend to wear out. The presence of the up-folding butt (in the models that are actually provided with it) doesn't even helps much in aimed fire because its accommodation is actually defective, and it can be partially effective in its function only if kept against the stomach or the thigh. The bolt of this machine-pistol has a very short service life; the safety of the weapon can be engaged only when the bolt is open, and this can lead to accidental discharges if the BORZ is dropped or receives a hit. Reliability is also poor. The dirt normally caused by the shooting can pollute the chamber or the bolt, thus leading to misfires. The tooth of the ejector can often cause the separation of the bullet case collar (or of a piece of the case anyway) that goes stuck in the ejection window, causing jammings or preventing a new round from being chambered. The early opening of bore leads to the ejection of solid-reactant gases inside the receiver group, and this doesn't only causes the rapid overheating of the weapon, but also dirts the striking pin.

    -THE HISTORY AND THE CURRENT SITUATION-
    The Chechen-manufactured BORZ is one of a number of weapons, made, reconfigured or repaired in Chechnya, which enable enemies of the Russian military and the pro-Moscow Chechen police force to continue their fight at very low cost. The net result is that even if the Russian authorities were to manage to stop the theft of weapons, or their trade and sale to the rebels, a substantial arsenal will remain in their hands.

    The 9x18mm BORZ machine-pistol is an ideal weapon for sudden attacks. It is a small compact gun, whose lightness and ease of use makes up for its poor technical quality.

    Here are some declarations of Maj. ANATOLY MEDVEDEV, an FSB (Russian Intelligence Service) officer dispatched to Chechenya:
    "This machine-pistol has quite poor tactical and technical features. The 9x18mm bullets from the Makarov pistol, used in the BORZ, are too powerful for the steel from which the gun’s barrel is made and wear it out quickly. After shooting two or three cartridges, a Borz simply begins to ‘spit’ the bullets out. Nonetheless, I would describe this gun as ideal for saboteurs and killers. It has entirely fulfilled its purpose as a weapon used by paramilitary groups of a partisan type. It has a fantastic rate of fire, and once all the bullets have been fired it can simply be thrown away. As far as I know, a BORZ costs very little in Chechenya, about 100 US Dollars, and its production requires little effort or expense".

    The BORZ machine-pistol was first produced in 1992 in Grozny’s Krasny Molot factory by the order of the first Chechen president. General Jokhar Dudayev, who personally received the first manufactured weapon bearing the number, 0001. Industrial production of the gun soon stopped due to the lack of good-quality metal and the outbreak of war in 1994. But the homemade manufacture of these weapons has continued up until recently.

    VLADIMIR SEMCHENKO, head of the science department at Moscow’s Central Army Forces Museum of Russia, declares that the main military museum of the country has several Chechen BORZ machine-pistols in its collection:
    "One of them was given to our museum as a gift by General Gennady Troshev [who formerly commanded Russian troops in Chechenya]. The exemplars of this gun that we have differ from one another both in their technical features and in appearance, which indicates that they were homemade".

    ADLAN MUSAYEV, formerly employed at the Krasny Molot factory, declares:
    "Only an handful of huntdeds of BORZ machine-pistols were produced there but it had spawned many more copies. As far as I recall, in two military campaigns the only weapon the extremists have managed to develop and start makeshift production of is the primitive BORZ machine-pistol."
    Last edited by Expatriate; 07-26-2009 at 04:51 AM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  17. #135

    Strange compact machine pistol

    Obviously homemade. Found it on a Russian site with no comment attached so I don't know its history. Looks like it was designed for maximum concealability without sacrificing firepower. The magazine actually forms the grip, which is interesting.


    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  18. #136

    Single Shot Weapons

    Although making a fully-automatic submachinegun is almost as easy as a single-shot weapon, full-autos usually require test firing and tweaking in order to get them to work right. This is time consuming and, unless a silencer is also made, could get you in trouble if the test-firings are heard by others.

    If you needed weapons in short order that would work properly without testing, you might want to make several single-shot guns instead of an automatic. They actually do have some advantages; for one, you don't have to make a magazine, which can be a tricky procedure. Two, if fitted with a "silencer", a single-shot weapon will be far quieter than an automatic, because the bolt does not slam back and forth loudly when fired, and there's no cases ejected on the floor. Three, theoretically if you lived in an oppressive country and were caught, single shot weapons are usually considered less of an offense than automatic weapons, and probably wouldn't trigger a large investigation. Of course, you shouldn't use this information to break the law, it is intended for study purposes only.

    Another useful thing about single shot weapons is that, since they have no repeating mechanism, they don't have to use factory made ammo. If you make a muzzle loaded weapon, you can use rocks, ball bearings or fishing weights for bullets and crushed match heads for gunpowder. You could use a battery, a switch, and a filament from a light bulb to ignite the charges, if other methods of ignition were too difficult to construct. For breech loading, you could make your own shotgun shells or pistol rounds using cardboard, plastic or metal tubes for the cases. Toy caps or strike-anywhere match heads can be used to make primers. So even if you can't get your hands on real ammunition you can still make a serviceable weapon. Several of the following guides detail this procedure.

    All single shot designs can be made into multiple shot weapons by attaching more barrels and triggers, or modifying the trigger to fire the next barrel with a rotating striker each time you pull it, like this rather crude design. There was once a commercially manufactured self-defense shotgun that worked like this. There is also a modern compact 4-barreled, 4 shot pistol called the COP-357 that uses the same principle.

    Here are three of Philip Luty's designs for improvised single-shot weapons.

    .22 caliber silenced pistol (.pdf):
    http://web.archive.org/web/200703041...f/22pistol.pdf
    US legal version:
    http://web.archive.org/web/200703040...com/about.html

    .22 caliber "Pen Gun":
    http://web.archive.org/web/200702210...pdf/ZipGun.pdf

    12 gauge Shotgun Pistol (.pdf):
    http://web.archive.org/web/200702210...12g-pistol.pdf
    Overview of parts:
    http://web.archive.org/web/200709261..._Schmatics.pdf

    Standard tubing sizes that can be used to make barrels for various calibers:
    http://web.archive.org/web/200702171...nbarrels.shtml



    This manual was posted earlier, but it's a good read, so I'll repost it here.
    Contains instructions for homemade ammo, as well as a homemade double-barrel shotgun:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/47583258/H...ade-Ammo-Brown




    From U.S. Army Technical Manual TM 31-210 Improvised Munitions Handbook:

    9mm Pipe Pistol:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...munition.shtml

    12 gauge Shotgun:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...12-gauge.shtml

    7.62mm Rifle:

    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...munition.shtml

    .45 Pipe Pistol:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...munition.shtml

    Match head shotgun:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...atch-gun.shtml

    .38 pipe pistol:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...munition.shtml

    .22 pipe pistol:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...munition.shtml

    Silencer:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...e-system.shtml

    How to use the improvised shotgun to launch Molotov Cocktails:
    http://www.libertyreferences.com/imp...launcher.shtml


    Some pics of single shot weapons:







    Last edited by Expatriate; 04-30-2011 at 12:02 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul




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  20. #137

    Weapons made in prisons:

    If firearms can be made in prison, under the very nose of the state, it leaves no doubt as to how easy it is. Why some people think that outlawing guns will keep them from being made in the outside world is a real mystery to me.



    Double barreled Shotgun:
    "made from iron bedposts; charge made of pieces of lead from curtain tape and match-heads, to be ignited by AA batteries and a broken light bulb. On May 21, 1984 two inmates of a prison in Celle, Germany, took a jailer as a hostage, showed off their fire power by letting go at a pane of bullet-proof glass (bottom right), and escaped by car."





    Double-barreled Pistol:
    "This gun was found along with other homemade firearms in the cell of two Celle prison inmates on November 15, 1984. The weapons had been made in the prison’s metal workshop. They were loaded with pieces of steel and match-heads."






    Four Shot Pistol:
    "A 4-barrel zip gun found on the shelves of the Kingston Penitentiary library on October 1945. The trigger, now missing, was a clasp from an overshoe."





    Shiv:
    "disguised as a wooden crucifix; found in an inmate’s cell in Wolfenbüttel prison, Germany, sometime around 1994; intended for use in an escape or as a general weapon. At that time a lot of crucifixes were fashioned in prison woodshops until jailers finally figured out their true purpose.[/QUOTE]






    Two-shot zip gun:
    Last edited by Expatriate; 07-27-2009 at 06:16 AM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  21. #138

    Paper cartridges... and paper guns

    Remember that Mythbusters episode where they made a lethal crossbow out of paper?

    Check out the videos in this guy's account. He hardens paper by gluing multiple layers of it together, basically a "papier mache" technique, and makes functioning ammo and firearms using the hardened paper. Yes, they use gunpowder, and yes, they are made from paper. I think the primers are toy caps wrapped in hardened paper, with a small piece of metal inside for them to be crushed against by the firing pin.

    You could easily make a gun suitable for hunting small game with this technique. If you rolled the barrel thick enough to withstand higher pressures, you could doubtless make a gun that could defend against humans as well.

    I bet you could also make paper cartridges that would work in a real firearm, or even a paper firearm that could use real cartridges. The main drawback to this construction material is the time it takes the glue to dry, and also the fact that it has to be painted to be waterproof.

    Also, if you wanted to make a gun for recreational shooting but were afraid of the barrel blowing up and maiming you, paper guns might be a good place to start, since a PAPER barrel blowing up is basically like a firecracker, no deadly shrapnel is produced. As long as you didn't hold the gun by the barrel you'd be fine.

    YouTube - stuff
    YouTube - homemade shotgun shells
    YouTube - homemade slug shell (loading)
    YouTube - Homemade Bullet
    YouTube - M1911 Experiment
    YouTube - Paper M1911
    YouTube - paper craft 5 (k98 blank + pencil shooting)
    YouTube - paper craft 2 (k98 bolt action)
    YouTube - Teaser 2
    YouTube - paper AK Pistol thing
    YouTube - AWSM Update/ Preview
    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-06-2009 at 02:23 AM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  22. #139
    Wow. The paper guns are seriously ridiculous.

    This is the best example yet why gun control would not work.

  23. #140
    I can make napalm.

  24. #141

    Post Submachine Gun Designer's Handbook - Dmitrieff

    This book is for the advanced home gunsmith - assuming you live somewhere other than the US where it's legal to build fully automatic weapons. Otherwise it's for study purposes only as protected by the 1st Amendment, which is afforded a little more respect by the fedgov than the 2nd.

    Combine the information in this book with the rather spartan, but easy to build SMG plans already posted (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) and you will have a pretty good base of information to start designing and building military-grade automatics. The first part contains useful information on history and development, trigger groups, firing mechanisms, capabilities and ammunition. The last section of the book contains blueprints and manufacturing instructions for the British Sten submachine gun as well as the Russian PPSh 41. Note however that both these guns were designed for mass production, not home construction, and may be somewhat difficult for the average person to attempt. You would be better served using the information to improve upon the simple SMG designs posted earlier, for example adding a selective fire mechanism or improving the bolt.

    Read online here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/6338832/su...ook-dimitrieff

    You can use this account to download it or make your own:
    username: random4570
    password: random4570


    Last edited by Expatriate; 04-30-2011 at 12:05 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  25. #142

    Building Bolt Action Rifles - Holmes

    This book looks like a decent source of information if you want to build a bolt-action rifle from scratch. Unlike some of the other weapon designs shown in this thread, a bolt rifle is perfectly legal to build without a permit most places in the US. The book assumes that you have a lathe and milling machine, as well as machining experience (it doesn't explain or define terms such as "broach") so it's not as if anyone could pick it up and create a gun from scratch. However some of the information could be useful for improving simpler designs or just learning more about rifles.

    To download, click the link, then right click the word "PDF" and click "Save Link As..."


    http://www.scribd.com/doc/6004471/bi...taction-rifles



    Description of contents:
    Introduction - Mr. Holmes defines what gunmaking is and how one may become a gunmaker.

    Tools and Equipment - A good lathe and mill are mandatory. If you cannot acquire good machine tools and learn how to use them, then you should just forget about trying to fabricate a quality firearm.

    Materials - Description of high-alloy steel, chamber reamers and stock wood with sources for purchasing.

    Design - Bolt-action design featuring a one-piece receiver with three forward locking lugs, one-piece bolt with three locking lugs, model 70-type three position safety, model 70-type trigger, and a Sako-type extractor. The advantage of three locking lugs is that they are easier to cut with a shop-made broach. The proper scope base will have to be determined by the maker.

    Receiver Manufacture - Describes the design and machining process of producing the receiver. Also included are instructions on making the broach used to form the receiver locking lugs.

    Bolt Manufacture - Describes the design and machining process, fitting the extractor, and welding the bolt handle.

    Trigger Assemblies - Describes the design and machining process of a model 70-type trigger. Also included, are instructions for fitting such a trigger to the 98 Mauser, P14/17 Enfield, and US Springfield. This chapter alone is worth the price of the book.

    Safeties - Describes the design and machining process of a three-position model 70-type safety, bolt sleeve, firing pin, and cocking piece.

    Bolt Stop and Ejector - Describes the design and machining process of the bolt stop and ejector.

    Magazines, Trigger Guards, and Floorplates - Describes the design and fabrication process of a one-piece steel trigger guard with hinged floorplate. A custom Savage 110 or Remington Model Seven would not be complete without an elegantly shaped steel trigger guard. Since none are available for purchase, you will have to make them.

    Modification of Existing Actions - Brief descriptions of what can be done to sporterize the Mauser 98, P-14/17 Enfield, and US Springfield.

    Barrel Fitting, Chambering, and Shaping - Very little is described about threading, chambering, and fitting a rifle barrel. Most of the chapter is devoted to the process of forming fluted and octagon barrels. A drawing of a barrel support tool used in machining is included.

    Iron Sights and Quarter Ribs - A very good description on tooling and process for producing band sight bases, and quarter ribs.

    Muzzle Brakes - Describes the design and machining process of making muzzle brakes. I have no doubt that Mr. Holmes muzzle brakes work well, but they add nothing to the appearance of the completed rifle.

    Stocks - Describes producing a one-piece wood stock from the blank by hand. Semi-inleted and shaped stocks are not readily available for such a unique rifle action. This is something that more hobby gunsmiths should consider learning. With practice, it is not really that hard to do. Brief description of quality stock wood and stock finishing.

    Checkering - A very good chapter with patterns on hand checkering. This is another skill that more hobby gunsmiths should consider learning. It's too bad Mr. Holmes did not include plans for making a checkering cradle.

    Buttplates - Describes producing and forming a curved steel butt plate and grip cap. Make or buy? You can decide, but it is still a good process to know.

    Heat Treatment - Describes the heat treatment of high-alloy steel. Mr. Holmes recommends that the receiver and bolt be sent to experts. The other parts can be heat treated in shop.

    Finishing and Coloring - Instructions are given only for metal preparation. The preparation requires most of the work and skill in producing a fine metal finish. No bluing process is explained.

    Adjusting and Test-Firing - Describes proper checking and testing of the trigger-safety system, feeding, extraction, and ejection before live firing. The rest is safety precautions.
    Last edited by Expatriate; 08-30-2009 at 01:34 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  26. #143
    Wow, lol, this thread has almost 100k views. (99,889 at the moment)
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  27. #144
    Quote Originally Posted by Expatriate View Post
    Wow, lol, this thread has almost 100k views. (99,889 at the moment)
    I wonder how many are from various federal agencies?
    "I know the urge to arm yourself, because that’s what I did. I was trained in firearms. When I walked to the hospital when my husband was sick, I carried a concealed weapon. I made the determination that if somebody was going to try to take me out I was going to take them with me."

    Diane Feinstein, 1995



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  29. #145
    Quote Originally Posted by Uriel999 View Post
    I wonder how many are from various federal agencies?
    Not too many I would think, unless the Feds plan on outlawing both firearms and free speech soon. All the info posted in this thread was hosted at various other websites already so it's not like anyone here is even the originator of said info. Totalitarian-run countries like China that prohibit firearms might have a problem with us making this information available to their subjects, but they don't have any jurisdiction over here.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  30. #146
    Quote Originally Posted by Expatriate View Post
    but they don't have any jurisdiction over here.
    Yet.
    Liberty is lost through complacency and a subservient mindset. When we accept or even welcome automobile checkpoints, random searches, mandatory identification cards, and paramilitary police in our streets, we have lost a vital part of our American heritage. America was born of protest, revolution, and mistrust of government. Subservient societies neither maintain nor deserve freedom for long.
    Ron Paul 2004

    Registered Ron Paul supporter # 2202
    It's all about Freedom

  31. #147

    How Barrels are Rifled

    If you want a gun that stays accurate beyond 10-20 meters, you need a rifled barrel. It spins the bullet like a football, stabilizing it so it doesn't veer off course.

    If you are unwilling to buy a premade rifled barrel and actually want to make the whole gun from scratch, you need to understand the process and the history of barrel making so that you can determine the best way to go about it.

    Here is a good explanation of the various modern processes used to accomplish this in a factory:
    http://www.firearmsid.com/Feature%20...anufacture.htm
    Online PDF source: http://www.scribd.com/doc/14467576/T...-Rifled-Barrel

    Note that cut rifling is the only one that you can realistically expect to accomplish at home. Luckily enough, it is also the method that can achieve the greatest accuracy. However, it used to take one to two days of solid work for the old American frontier gunsmiths to make a barrel by hand that way, and they weren't slackers.

    I will post some homemade rifling tools sometime soon.

    View down a rifled barrel:
    Last edited by Expatriate; 04-30-2011 at 12:07 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  32. #148

    Homemade Rifling Machines

    I'll edit this post to add more info on rifling machines as I come across it.


    How to build an early American cut rifling machine of the type used before, during and for some time after the Revolution:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/3602969/fi...ifling-Machine

    Description of the use of such a machine, made available by the U.S. National Park Service:
    http://www.nps.gov/history/history/o...r/13/index.htm

    A short description with pictures of the device being used to cut rifling in a barrel:
    http://www.korns.org/misc/rifling-jig.html
    Last edited by Expatriate; 10-02-2009 at 08:55 PM.
    "Truth will win in the end. We just don't know when the end is. So we have to persevere." ― Carol Paul


  33. #149
    Hey why go throught all the trouble with all that paper and sticky nasty gule, when you can simply buy an airsoft gun for 20 bucks, the spring powered walther p99 i bought fires at 200 feet per second, that's just 20 feet over half of a football field..........in one second!!!!! Airsoft can kill, i was talking to my dad and he said it can kill!!! Most enemies will not be 200 feet from you, more like 5! Just image the impact!!! This message is to all who see it!!!!!!

  34. #150
    Quote Originally Posted by LiveFreeOrDie!!! View Post
    Hey why go throught all the trouble with all that paper and sticky nasty gule, when you can simply buy an airsoft gun for 20 bucks, the spring powered walther p99 i bought fires at 200 feet per second, that's just 20 feet over half of a football field..........in one second!!!!! Airsoft can kill, i was talking to my dad and he said it can kill!!! Most enemies will not be 200 feet from you, more like 5! Just image the impact!!! This message is to all who see it!!!!!!
    I use airsoft rifles, you could use it to squirrel hunt, but that is about it.
    I'd rather have a .410 than an airsoft rifle.
    plus, when you use metal BBs and not plastic, you aren't going to get the same range and velocity. Plus, there is no rifling, so its not very accurate.
    rewritten history with armies of their crooks - invented memories, did burn all the books... Mark Knopfler

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